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Table of Contents Introduction ................................................................................................................................................ 2
Overall Goal of the Training Package ...................................................................................................... 4
Target Audience & Objectives ................................................................................................................. 4
Preparation for the training .................................................................................................................... 5
Pre and Post test ......................................................................................................................................... 6
Sample MPDSR training agenda ................................................................................................................ 11
Module 1: Overview of MPDSR and PHEM ............................................................................................. 13
Introduction to PHEM: .......................................................................................................................... 13
Practical 1: WHY Did Mrs X die? ....................................................................................................... 19
Ethiopia MPDSR overview: .................................................................................................................... 21
Module 2: Understanding determinants and causes of maternal and perinatal death ............................ 28
Practical 2: Brainstorming causes and determinants ........................................................................ 28
Module 3: Identification and Notification ................................................................................................. 35
Practical 3: Assigning ID codes .......................................................................................................... 38
Practical 4: Identification Exercise .................................................................................................... 40
Practice on Using the Identification & Notification Forms .................................................................... 45
Practical 5: Notifications ................................................................................................................... 45
Module 4: Maternal and perinatal death investigation ............................................................................ 46
Practical 6: Community level investigation using Verbal Autopsy ..................................................... 54
Practical 7: Facility level investigation using the Facility Based Abstraction Form ............................ 55
Module 5: Maternal and perinatal death review ...................................................................................... 57
Practical 8: Using the Case Based Reporting Form ............................................................................ 64
Module 6: Data aggregation,analysis and interpretation and reporting ................................................... 67
Practical 9: Interpreting data ............................................................................................................ 71
Module 7: Response ................................................................................................................................. 74
Identifying responses ............................................................................................................................ 85
Practical 10: SMART responses ......................................................................................................... 85
Action plan template ............................................................................................................................ 88
Module 8 MPDSR Role and Responsibility ................................................................................................ 89
Module 9: MPDSR Monitoring and Evaluation ......................................................................................... 91
2
Introduction Ethiopia has made remarkable achievements in reducing maternal and child mortality
by more than two thirds from its baseline during the MDG era. Despite significant
progress, the magnitude of maternal and perinatal mortality in Ethiopia remains high
and these high numbers serve as a call to action for the elimination of preventable
maternal and perinatal deaths. This is one of the top priorities of the health sector
transformation plan (2016-2020) and the national reproductive health and national
newborn and child survival strategies for the same period.
Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Response (MPDSR) is one of the
strategies to address the avoidable causes of maternal and perinatal deaths at
multiple levels of the health service. A functioning MPDSR system should ensure
accurate identification and timely reporting of maternal and perinatal deaths,
systematic review of contributing factors, and implementation of evidence-based
responses to prevent future deaths. MPDSR requires action at all levels of the health
system from community and facility to regional and national levels. MPDSR should form
an integral part of broader quality improvement processes and accountability
mechanisms.
MPDSR is a system that tracks and measures all maternal and perinatal deaths in real
time. This enables understanding of underlying causes and contributing factors of the
deaths, and can stimulate further action to prevent similar deaths in future. Furthermore,
it provides information on the number of deaths, their place and timing, and whether or
not they were preventable.
In 2017, the Ethiopian Federal Ministry of Health (FMoH) is integrating perinatal death
surveillance and response (PDSR) in the national MDSR program, which has been
implemented since 2013. Following the development of the MPDSR Technical
Guidance this training material was developed to improve the competencies of health
care providers and program managers working in the maternal and neonatal health
sector. This document contains training materials to prepare trainees to implement fully
integrated maternal and perinatal death surveillance and response (MPDSR).
3
The training manual provides an overview of the system’s structure, and introduces the
newly published National MPDSR Technical Guidance, including its data collection and
reporting tools. Training will be conducted by a multi-sectoral team drawn from the
National MPDSR technical working group.
In the first instance, a national MPDSR Training of Trainers (ToT) will take place, followed
by regional cascading to relevant participants in all Regional Health Bureau (RHB) and
city administrations in the country. This MPDSR training is estimated to take 3 days.
This manual is designed to help trainers work through the presentations and
participatory group activities that make up the training workshop. It is accompanied by
the following materials:
• Sample pre- and post-tests
• Power point presentations
• Sample agenda of the training
• 1 video in mp4 format (also freely available in the following link.
http://www.who.int/maternal_child_adolescent/multimedia/en/ or
http://mdsr-action.net/other-resources/whydidmrsxdie/
The training package is designed to be interactive, with the inclusion of practice-based
individual and group activities to familiarize participants with the tools and processes of
the Ethiopian MPDSR system. Participants will be actively engaged to consider how the
MPDSR will build on their existing expertise and knowledge. The emphasis throughout
the training should be on the use of MPDSR as a basis for action.
The importance of multi-professional team collaboration will be emphasized throughout
the training, as this has been shown to benefit the MPDSR system by strengthening
communication between multi professional groups (surveillance officers, clinicians,
midwives, data managers, community representatives, etc.). Where possible, training at
each level should be delivered by a multi-professional training team, following the
model of the national workshop.
4
Overall Goal of the Training Package To deliver a practical introduction to the Ethiopia MPDSR and support establishment of
a functional, effective and action-oriented MPDSR system across Ethiopia
Specific Aims
1. Introduce MPDSR concepts and rationale, with presentation of international
evidence for its effectiveness and best practice
2. Provide a detailed overview of the Ethiopia MPDSR model and vision for how it
will operate at each level of the national health system
3. Ensure staff are equipped with the requisite knowledge and competence-based
skills for each component of the MPDSR process
4. Provide an opportunity for participants to become familiar with the use of the
National MPDSR Guidance and tools for data collection and reporting.
5. Ensure the health system is responding to each maternal and perinatal death
and accountability is established.
Target Audience & Objectives Nine training modules have been developed. Some may be more relevant to different
audiences/ groups of trainees. Depending on the level of the health system that
participants come from, there may need to be a slightly different emphasis to ensure
the following objectives of the training:
• National and Regional leads Building political commitment, orientation • Referral/District Hospitals Conducting facility based data collection • Zones and Woreda Managing data flow, identifying actions &
reporting upwards • Health centers Collecting, reporting & reviewing community
and health center deaths
By the end of each training workshop, participants should:
• Understand how MPDSR can reduce maternal and perinatal mortality
• Know the structure of the Ethiopian MPDSR, including roles and responsibilities
• Be familiar with the contents of the National MPDSR Technical Guidance
• Recognize and know how to use the national tools
• Demonstrate ability to recommend appropriate actions
5
• Appreciate the importance of MPDSR processes, particularly the need for
smooth bi-directional flow of information between different levels of the system
• Understand the role of monitoring actions to ensure the “response cycle” is
completed
Preparation for the training Good preparation is required for all training to ensure everything runs smoothly. Below
are a few tips for maximizing successful implementation of the MPDSR training package.
• Number of Participants: Given the participatory nature of this training package, it
is likely to work best for groups of 25-35. A larger group is more difficult to
manage, particularly during the small group work and discussion sessions.
• Number of Trainers: Although presentations can be delivered by a single trainer,
it is useful to have 3-4 facilitators or training assistants to help during the practical
exercises. Facilitators can rotate among groups to answer questions or help lead
them in the right direction. Roughly 1 facilitator/ training assistant per 8-10
participants is best. For example, a group of 30 trainees is ideally facilitated by 3
experts, including the trainers.
To provide diversity of experience, perspectives, and training styles, the
workshops should draw on several trainers to lead the modules, based on
expertise. A multi-professional team will ensure that the views of different health
disciplines are incorporated in the training.
• Venue: The training requires a room large enough for all participants to fit in
comfortably, with an unobstructed view of the power point projector
(particularly during the video). Enough space is also required for small groups to
sit together during the activities, ideally around a table, although chairs can be
moved into circles throughout the room. Alternatively, separate spaces can be
made available for groups to work in.
• Materials: Prior to starting the training, it is important to ensure there are enough
copies of the National MPDSR Technical Guidance, the pre (and post) test, the
Workbook, the Answer book, and anonymous clinical cases (to be returned
after the training). Note that Answer books should not be distributed until the end
6
of the training! Flipcharts and marker pens should also be available for group
discussions and noting down responses/issues from the activities.
• Equipment: A power point projector, screen and computer are critical for
showing the presentations. A microphone is useful in large venues and is required
for the video shown during the training (unless computer speakers are separately
available).
• Timing: The sample workshop agenda provided in this manual suggests a 3 day
training, which should provide enough time for the presentation of scheduled
content and completion of practical exercises. Some adaptation may be made
depending on the target audience for the training, to reflect priority areas. For
example, additional time may need to be allocated for specific modules, such
as Community Based Data Capture (for health centers which will manage the
Verbal Autopsy process) or Facility Level Reviews (for hospital and health center
staff).
Pre and Post test The pre- and post- test is provided below (the second version has answers to help
trainers score the tests. Answers are also provided in the answer book). Tests should be
scored out of 100% as indicated. The test reflects specific MPDSR system roles and
responsibilities at each level of the health system and is aligned to the learning
objectives suited to participants at each of these.
The tests are also available as separate documents as part of this training package
(without the scores marked on the questions). This exercise should be completed by
participants prior to the start of the training to set a “benchmark” of current
understanding of the principles of MDSR and how the system will be implemented. The
test can be administered again after training to help participants identify their progress
and to alert the trainer(s) to any remaining gaps in knowledge.
7
MPDSR Training Pre and Post Test For each question, please circle the correct answer: 1. MPDSR stands for...?
A. Maternal and Perinatal Death System and Response B. Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Review C. Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Response D. Maternal and Perinatal Death Systematic Register
2. What is the most important part of the MPDSR process in order to reduce maternal and perinatal mortality?
A. Identification B. The review of the case C. The analysis of the case D. The actions
3. Notification. Which of the following deaths should be reported by HEW and surveillance staff? (2 pts for each correct answer)
A. 14-year-old girl who died giving birth true/ false B. Baby delivered dead at home after 6 months of pregnancy true/ false C. 3-week old baby who died of pneumonia true/ false D. 52-year-old woman who died in an accident true/ false E. 21-year-old woman who died after a vaginal hemorrhage true/ false
4. Screening. Which of these might be a maternal death? (2 pts for each correct answer)
A. 45-year-old woman collapsed and died suddenly. She had missed two periods. true/ false
B. A woman with a 35-day old baby had a fever for 3 days before she died. true/false
C. A 16-year-old girl took some medicine two days after her first sexual intercourse because she thought she might be pregnant. true/false
D. A woman, known to be HIV positive, died of pneumonia. Her family did not know the date of her last period. true/ false
E. A married 26-year old woman miscarriage her pregnancy after 4 months. A week later she developed a fever and was sick in bed for about 5 weeks and died in her sleep. true/ false
5. Reporting maternal or perinatal deaths. (2 pts for each correct answer) A. Community members can inform HEW about the death of any woman of
reproductive age true/ false B. A stillbirth at a health center should be reported on the weekly surveillance
form true/ false C. Only deaths that occur in the labor ward need to be reported by the hospital
as part of MPDSR true/ false D. The verbal autopsy should be carried out by a doctor true/ false
8
E. All maternal deaths, regardless of where they occur, should have a verbal autopsy completed in the community true/ false
6. Reviewing deaths (2 pts for each correct answer)
A. MPDSR review should be conducted by existing Rapid Response Teams (RRT) at every level, with the addition of MNCH experts true/ false
B. The case based reporting form is completed during the review process in order to summarize causes and determinants of the death true/ false
C. All action plans will be developed at Regional level and disseminated downwards true/ false
D. Determining preventability of a death is one of the review’s aims. true/ false E. Only clinicians should attend MPDSR review meetings true/ false
7. Community level factors affecting maternal and perinatal deaths (5 pts for each correct answer)
A. High fertility rates contribute to complications for both pregnant women and their babies true/ false
B. If community members correctly recognize danger signs, they can urge the family to seek medical attention quickly true/ false
8. Quality of Care factors affecting maternal and perinatal deaths. (5 points each) A. Oxytocic drugs are not essential to provide quality care in the third stage of
labor true /false B. The quality of referral systems, admission procedures, and care during recovery
should all be considered during MPDSR data analysis true /false 9. Reporting and Data Flow in an MDSR: (5 points each)
A. Community deaths will be reviewed by a Health Centre RRT committee and data will be summarized and sent to EPHI and the woreda and regional health offices: true / false
B. It is not necessary for a review committee to meet or submit a report during a month when NO maternal and perinatal deaths have occurred: true / false
10. Which of the following are appropriate actions that might be taken by a Health center review committee? (2 pts. each)
A. Request BEmONC training for untrained staff true / false B. Work with Community leaders and woreda administrator to get electricity supply
true/false C. Punish the SBA who was on duty during the last death true / false D. Ensure iron is available for all antenatal patients true / false E. Change the staffing schedules to ensure midwives available at all time
True/false
9
ANSWERS to Training Pre and Post Test For each question, please circle the correct answer: 4. MPDSR stands for...?
A. Maternal and Perinatal Death System and Response B. Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Review C. Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Response D. Maternal and Perinatal Death Systematic Register
5. What is the most important part of the MPDSR process in order to reduce maternal and perinatal mortality?
A. Identification B. The review of the case C. The analysis of the case D. The actions
6. Notification. Which of the following deaths should be reported by HEW and surveillance staff? (2 pts for each correct answer)
A. 14-year-old girl who died giving birth true/ false B. Baby delivered dead at home after 6 months of pregnancy true/ false C. 3-week old baby who died of pneumonia true/ false D. 52-year-old woman who died in an accident true/ false E. 21-year-old woman who died after a vaginal hemorrhage true/ false
4. Screening. Which of these might be a maternal death? (2 pts for each correct answer)
A. 45-year-old woman collapsed and died suddenly. She had missed two periods. true/ false
B. A woman with a 35-day old baby had a fever for 3 days before she died. true/false
C. A 16-year-old girl took some medicine two days after her first sexual intercourse because she thought she might be pregnant.
true/false D. A woman, known to be HIV positive, died of pneumonia. Her family did not
know the date of her last period. true/ false E. A married 26-year old woman miscarriage her pregnancy after 4 months. A
week later she developed a fever and was sick in bed for about 5 weeks and died in her sleep. true/ false
5. Reporting maternal or perinatal deaths. (2 pts for each correct answer) A. Community members can inform HEW about the death of any woman of
reproductive age true/ false B. A stillbirth at a health center should be reported on the weekly surveillance
form true/ false C. Only deaths that occur in the labor ward need to be reported by the hospital
as part of MPDSR true/ false D. The verbal autopsy should be carried out by a doctor true/ false
10
E. All maternal deaths, regardless of where they occur, should have a verbal autopsy completed in the community true/ false
6. Reviewing deaths (2 pts for each correct answer)
A. MPDSR review should be conducted by existing Rapid Response Teams (RRT) at every level, with the addition of MNCH experts true/ false
B. The case based reporting form is completed during the review process in order to summarize causes and determinants of the death true/ false
C. All action plans will be developed at Regional level and disseminated downwards true/ false
D. Determining preventability of a death is one of the review’s aims. true/ false E. Only clinicians should attend MPDSR review meetings true/ false
7. Community level factors affecting maternal and perinatal deaths (5 pts for each correct answer)
A. High fertility rates contribute to complications for both pregnant women and their babies true/ false
B. If community members correctly recognize danger signs, they can urge the family to seek medical attention quickly true/ false
8. Quality of Care factors affecting maternal and perinatal deaths. (5 points each) A. Oxytocic drugs are not essential to provide quality care in the third stage of
labor true /false B. The quality of referral systems, admission procedures, and care during recovery
should all be considered during MPDSR data analysis true /false 9. Reporting and Data Flow in an MDSR: (5 points each)
A. Community deaths will be reviewed by a Health Centre RRT committee and data will be summarized and sent to EPHI and the woreda and regional health offices: true / false
B. It is not necessary for a review committee to meet or submit a report during a month when NO maternal and perinatal deaths have occurred: true / false
10. Which of the following are appropriate actions that might be taken by a Health center review committee? (2 pts. each)
A. Request BEmONC training for untrained staff true / false B. Work with Community leaders and woreda administrator to get electricity supply
true/false C. Punish the SBA who was on duty during the last death true / false D. Ensure iron is available for all antenatal patients true / false E. Change the staffing schedules to ensure midwives available at all time
true/false
11
Sample MPDSR training agenda
Date Time Session title 1st day
Day
1
8:30 - 9:00 am Registration of participants 9:00 --9:15 am Opening Remark 9:15 - 9:30 am Participants Introduction 9:30 -10:00 am Pre-test 10:00 -10:30 am Module 1 : Introduction to PHEM and Definitions of Maternal Perinatal deaths 10:30 -10:45 am Tea Break 10:45-12:00 pm Module 1 : Why did Mrs. X die? + exercise
Module 1 : Overview of MPDSR 12:00-1:00 pm Module 2: Determinants and causes of maternal and perinatal deaths including practical exercise
1:00 - 2:00 pm Lunch 2:00 - 4:30 pm Module3 : Identification and Notification of maternal and perinatal death including practical exercises
for both maternal and perinatal,
Identification exercise
Notification exercise
4.30-4.45 Tea Break 4:45 -5.30 pm Module 4 : Investigation and verification of maternal and perinatal death
Exercise on Coding of maternal and perinatal deaths 2nd day
Day
2
8:30 - 900 am Day 1 Recap 9:00-10:30 am Module 4 : Investigation and verification of maternal and perinatal death
Community investigation with verbal autopsy including role play
12
10:30 -10:45 am Tea Break 10:45 – 12.30 Module 4 : Investigation and verification of maternal and perinatal death
Including practical exercise of Facility based abstraction
12:30 - 1:30 pm Lunch Break
1:30 – 3.30 pm Module 5 : Maternal and perinatal death review including practical exercise with MDRF and PDRF
3:30 - 3:45 pm Tea Break 3:45 - 5:30 pm Module 6 Data Analysis and aggregation including practical exercise with data aggregation
3rd day
Day
3
8:30 - 3:00 am Day 2 Recap 9.00-10:30 am Module 7: Maternal and perinatal death response at ALL level including practical exercise 10:30 -10:45 am Tea Break 10:45 - 11:15 pm Module 8 :Roles and responsibilities for MPDSR 11:15 - 12:00 pm Module 9 :Monitoring and evaluation for MPDSR 12.00-12.30 Post test 12:30 - 1:30 pm Lunch Break 1:30 - 2:00 pm Discussion on Administrative issues 2:00 - 2:30 pm Feedback and outlying questions 2;30-3:00pm Wrap up
13
Module 1: Overview of MPDSR and PHEM
Introduction to PHEM: Slide 1
Introduction to Public Health Emergency Management (PHEM)
and Maternal and Perinatal Death Definitions
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 2
• Background on surveillance activities in Ethiopia • Introduction to PHEM• Goal and objectives of PHEM• Mandate of the PHEM Center
– Capacity Building– Early Warning and Communication– Response– Recovery and Rehabilitation
• Maternal and Perinatal Death Definition
hutline
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
14
Slide 3 Back ground:Diseases Surveillance In Ethiopia Between 1998-2009
Diseases Surveillance In Ethiopia before 2009 It includes:
• Integrated diseases surveillance
• Response• Containment of an
outbreaks Focused on epidemic
diseases only• No nutritional surveillance• Weak laboratory
surveillance• Event based surveillance
Lack of appropriate preparedness
No recovery activities after disaster
Since 2009
Public Health Emergency Management (PHEM)
Designed by BPR It is one of the Eight
core processes of MOH Located in Ethiopian
Public Health Institute
Do not spend too much time on this slide, as it is just to provide some context on the health surveillance system into which MPDSR is integrated.
Slide 4 Introduction:
Mainly focus on Epidemic disease
Surveillance data comes monthly
Smallest reporting unit is Health Center
Week early warning system
Delayed responseNo recovery No event based
surveillance
IDSR PHEMMulti hazard approachSurveillance Data comes
weeklySmallest reporting unit is
Health post Robust early warning system Prompt responseRecovery activities
includedEvent based surveillance
Most participants will already be familiar with this information – you can ask for questions of clarification and then move on.
Slide 5
Goal of PHEM: To markedly reduce mortality and morbidity due to
epidemics and other Public Health Emergencies and minimize associated social and economic crisis
General Objective
To prepare for, detect early, and contain epidemics locally ; respond timely to other public health emergencies and recover quickly from their impacts.
Goal and objective of tHEa:
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
15
Slide 6 Capacity Building:
Reporting formats for all reportable events Types of Reporting Formats
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 7 Capacity Building:1. Community case definitionsSensitiveUsed at the community
level
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 8 Capacity Building:
2. Standard caseDefinitionsCustomized from WHO case
definitions
Printed and distributed to all
health facility
Used at health center and
above
Mention that the case definitions for maternal and perinatal deaths will be provided in this training.
16
Slide 9 Capacity Building:3. Guidelines already printed and
distributedPHEM guidelineCholera guidelineMeasles guidelineMalaria guideline Influenza Surveillance
implementation guidelineMeningitis GuidelineAFP GuidelineNNT GuidelineMPDSR Technical Guidance
Guideline under PreparationYellow FeverRabiesAnthraxDengue fever
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 10 Indicator based surveillance:
1. Acute Flaccid Paralysis2. Anthrax3. Avian Human Influenza4. Cholera5. Dracunculiasis/Guinea worm6. Measles7. Neonatal tetanus8. Pandemic Influenza A(H1N1)9. Rabies10. Small pox11. SARS12. Viral Hemorrhagic Fever(VHF)13. Yellow Fever14. Maternal Death15. Perinatal Death
Immediately Reportable1. Dysentery2. Malaria3. Meningitis4. Relapsing5. Typhoid Fever6. Typhus7. Severe Acute Malnutrition
Weekly Reportable
Criteria for identification1. Diseases under eradication and
elimination2. Disease of public health
importance3. Diseases of international
concern
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 11 Timeline for immediately Reportable Diseases:
Region
Event
Woreda Zone EHNRI
Time
Within 30 Minutes
Within 30 Minutes
Within 30 MinutesWithin 30
Minutes
1:301:00 2:000:30
Health Facility
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
17
Slide 12 Timeline for Weekly Reportable Diseases:
Event
HF to woreda
Region to EPHI
The following Week
Woredato zone
Zone to Region
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 13 Reporting Channel:
Health Facility
EPHI
Woreda
Zone
Region
• Paper• Telephone
TelephoneFax
TelephoneE-mail
Fax
E-mailFaxRumor-Phone
E-mailTelephonePapers
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 14 CASE DEFINITIhN
Classification of case definitions:
1. ChaaUNITY CASE DEFINITIhN
1.a. Probable death:
• Broad, sensitive, needs further screening, used by the general community
1.b. Possible (suspected) death:
• Filtered after screening verbally
• Gets coded and used for investigation
2. STANDARD (ChNFIRaED) CASE DEFINITIhN
– No need for verification
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
18
Slide 15 ChaaUNITY CASE DEFINITIhN
PROBABLE MATERNAL DEATHS
• Death of a woman of reproductive age group: (15-49 years of age)
PROBABLE PERINATAL DEATHS
• The birth of a dead foetus or death of a new born
These are key definitions for the MPDSR system.
Slide 16
Suspected maternal death
“trobable maternal death” plus at
least one of the following (Screen):
Died while pregnant,
Died within 42 days of
termination of pregnancy or
missed her menses before she
died
Suspected perinatal death
“trobable perinatal death” plus (screen):
– Birth after 7 month of pregnancy
and
– New born dead at the time of birth
OR
– Death within 28 days of delivery
ChaaUNITY CASE DEFINITIhN
Screening questions can be answered by family members or health providers who were familiar with the mother and/or baby prior to the death.
Slide 17
1. Any one who knows her
duration of pregnancy or
2. GA of 28 weeks or 196 days
starting from the first date of
the last normal menstrual
period (LNMP)
Screen if there was seven months of pregnancy using:
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
19
Slide 18 STANDARD CASE DEFINITIhN
Confirmed maternal death
“The death of a woman while pregnant
or within 42 days of the end of
pregnancy (irrespective of duration and
site of pregnancy), from any cause
related to or aggravated by the
pregnancy or its management but not
from accidental or incidental causes “
(Source: ICD-10)
Confirmed terinatal death
“Death of a fetus born after 28
completed weeks of gestation or
neonatal deaths through the first 28
completed days after birth”
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 19 By Using :
1. LNat : GA of 28 weeks or 196 days starting from the first date of the last menstrual period (LNMP) or
2. Fundal height of 28 cm
3. Early or First Ta Ultrasound:
• CRL (9-11 weeks) or • GS diameter at 5-6 GA weeks.
Gestational age of 28 weeks is confirmed
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Practical 1: WHY Did Mrs X die?
Slide 1
Understanding the “pathway to death”
Video
Why Did ars. X Die?
Make sure you test the video in the training venue prior to the actual training, so you can be sure it works. In particular, make sure participants can hear everything in the video. If the sound is not optimal, then provide a summary narrative.
To save time, play the video from 01:22 minutes UNTIL the end of the animation at 11.22 minutes
20
Slide 2 Short Exercise (10 minutes)
1. Turn to 1-2 people next to you2. Discuss the video with the following in mind:
What was the direct cause of ars. X’s death Were there any indirect causes? What evidence did the review committees use to
make changes in quality of care at the facility? List 2 actions resulting from the analysis of ars.
X’s death taken at the hospital after the first review?
The video itself includes superfluous material, including an interview with a famous Obstetrician who has been instrumental in intensifying efforts to reduce maternal mortality. After 10-15 minutes of participants working in pairs, bring everyone back together for a group discussion. Ensure that participants understand the difference between the direct cause of Mrs. X’s death (antepartum haemorrhage), its indirect cause (anaemia) and any contributing social factors (low status of women, poor nutrition, lack of awareness of ANC, transport costs)
tractical 1: Why did ars X die? ANSWERS Q1: What was the direct cause of Mrs Xs death? Antepartum Haemorrhage Q2: Were there any indirect causes? Anaemia Q3: What evidence did the review committees use to make changes in quality of care at the facility?
Staff MDR Review: Conducted a retrospective audit of files, including Mrs. X’s, and also interviewed her family members in the community
International Review (National Enquiry): Reviewed aggregated data from across facilities, including social and cultural issues related to access to family planning and gender roles and responsibilities.
Q4: List 2 actions taken at Hospital level after the first review?
o Improved blood supply o Increased availability of emergency services e.g. Caesarean Section o More trained midwives both for ANC and Delivery
21
Ethiopia MPDSR overview:
Slide 1
aaternal & terinatal DeathSurveillance and Response (atDSR):
Overview and Introduction to National Guidance
Photo from VSO 2016 Annual Review
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 2 Learning objectivesBy the end of this session, participants will :
• Understand the purpose of atDSR• Be familiar with key concepts and
definitions• Know the structure of the Ethiopian
atDSR system• Identify how data flows through the
system• Be aware of the atDSR National Guidance
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 3 What is atDSR?
Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Response is a key component of the health
system that incorporates identification, notification, analysis, and determination of
causes and avoidability of maternal and perinatal deaths, with the goal of acting to
prevent these in future.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
22
Slide 4 What is atDSR?
Community Based & Facility BasedContinuous Cycle
4. Respond with action
3. Review deaths
1. Identify deaths
2. Notify deaths
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 5 Adding the t to atDSR
• Ethiopia’s aDSR system was established in E.C. 2006
• tublic Health Emergency aanagement (tHEa) has been responsible for aDSR data collection since E.C. 2007
• Now that the aDSR system is established across the country, perinatal deaths can be integrated into the process
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 6 Justification for atDSR
• aCH remains a key national health priority• Ethiopia’s maternal mortality rate is estimated
to be 412/100,000 live births = 11,000 deaths per year
• The perinatal mortality rates is estimated to be 46/1000 births = 87,000 neonatal deaths & 97,000 still births per year
• atDSR is part of the HSTt as a strategy to reduce avoidable deaths
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 7 tHEa – aCH Integration
• tHEa leads Ethiopia’s surveillance• aaternal deaths are one of the weekly reportable
conditions• Following reporting and review, case based data
are aggregated and analysed within regional and national databases
• The aCH directorate receives analysed data and works to identify appropriate responses at every level of the health system.
• Perinatal deaths will be added to this existing data management platform
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 8 Coordination of atDSR within tHEaNational technical working group:
Quarterly meetings and review of national data
RHB TWG: aonthly meeting and review of atDRFs
Zonal Level Reporting
Woreda Level Reporting
Health Centre RRT Committee:Reviews Verbal Autopsies for community & facility deaths
Hospital RRT Committee:Reviews deaths occurring
within the premises
Referral Hospitals
This is the basic structure of the Ethiopian MPDSR review committees at each level of the health system
Slide 9 Goal and hbjectives of Guidance
Goal:
To guide effective implementation and scale up of atDSR in a systematic, standardized and integrated manner
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 10 turpose of the atDSR GuidanceTo facilitate effective functioning of Ethiopia’s
MPDSR for:oSurveillance focal personsohealth care managers and providersopolicy makers who take action based on
atDSR findings To ensure use of emerging information in
improving maternal & perinatal health care quality and outcomes
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 11 Basics of atDSR Data FlowIdentify all probable maternal and perinatal deaths
occurring in both facilities and the community
Determine if the death is a suspected maternal or perinatal death
Notify suspected maternal and perinatal deaths to the focal point at the appropriate level of the health
system level
Verbal autopsy conductedReview conducted
Case-based report completedActions identified
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 12 trinciples of atDSR
The following ethical principles are central to MPDSR implementation:
oConfidentiality
oAnonymity
oRespect
oNo Name, Not Blame and No Shame!
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 13 Confidentiality: a Code of conduct
• Local data collectors and involved health care workers are the only staff who see the names of deceased women and babies
• Staff who gather data for atDSR must commit to never sharing the information
• Review committee members at all levels must sign a non-disclosure confidentiality agreement (kept on record)
• Data cannot be spoken about outside the formal review process
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 14 Draft Disclaimer (Non-disclosure confidentiality agreement)
We, the members of the ---- review committee, agree to maintain anonymity and confidentiality for all the cases discussed at this meeting, held on [DATE]. We pledge not to talk to anyone outside this meeting about details of the events analysed here, and will not disclose the names of any individuals involved, including family members or health care providers.
A disclaimer like this should be signed at the start of every review meeting, at all levels of the health system (in facility based committees as well as Rapid Response Teams)
Slide 15 Anonymity
• Notes and reports protect the patient, friends, family and staff members involved
• Names obscured on case notes used in review
• No names recorded on abstraction forms• Family informed of the purpose of the
investigation and how data will be used
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 16 Essentials of no blame
• Acknowledgment throughout system that mistakes do happen
• Constructive approach to learning from every death
• Identifying preventive measures for the future remains the priority
• Results of aDSR to be used as a learning experience and not for any legal process
It is rare for a death to be caused by just one mistake or one person. Most commonly, a series of events together lead up to a perinatal or maternal death. Therefore, it is more useful to identify a range of factors that might have prevented the death at each step.
Slide 17
The purpose of reviewing a maternal or perinatal death is to give value to that life and collectively learn from the experience NOT to blame individuals or institutions
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 18 Culture of no blame
The man in the boat needs help managing his appetite, a reminder of good nutrition, and assistance to stop sinking, but NOT a lecture on his poor eating habits!• Healthcare providers are vulnerable to self
blame, which does not improve care• Support and training are better solutions for
preventing future deaths• “No blame” is NhT “no accountability”
This man is at risk of drowning.... How can he be helped without blaming him for his behaviour?
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Slide 19 Summary
• atDSR system captures maternal and perinatal deaths in communities and facilities
• atDSR surveillance is managed by PHEM but MCH is involved in review and response
• The ultimate aim of atDSR is to identify feasible action to prevent avoidable maternal and perinatal deaths
• atDSR follows key principles of confidentiality, anonymity and no blame
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Module 2: Understanding determinants and causes of maternal and perinatal death Slide 1
Understanding causes and determinants of maternal and perinatal deaths
Slide 2 Learning objectivesBy the end of this session, participants will be able to:
• Explain the difference between causes and determinants of maternal and perinatal deaths
• Recognize common cause of maternal and perianal deaths
• Classify determinants using the “3 delays”
Slide 3 Brainstorming Exercise
In the next 5 minutes: List 3-5 main causes of maternal deaths
during or immediately after childbirth in Ethiopia
List 3-5 main causes of perinatal deaths(still births and neonatal deaths) in Ethiopia
For each of these, note down what social factors you think contribute to them
Practical 2: Brainstorming causes and determinants hn your own, in the next 5 minutes ....
1. List 2 main causes of maternal death during or immediately after childbirth in Ethiopia
2. List 2 main causes of perinatal death in Ethiopia 3. For each of these, what social factors contribute to them?
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tossible main causes of maternal death
Haemorrhage
Ruptured Uterus/ Obstructed Labour
Sepsis
Contributing social factors
Poor nutritional status Insufficient access to family planning Too many closely spaced pregnancies Lack of clean delivery and clean water Unwanted pregnancy, followed by induced abortion
tossible main causes of terintal death
Birth Asphexia
Prematurity/ LBW
Infections
Contributing social factors Laboring long at home Lack of transport Poor quality care in the health facility Poor maternal nutrition Infection Poverty Lack of education High work load Maternal infection Lack of clean delivery and clean water Poor infection prevention practice health facility
Slide 4 aaternal Death
Causes
The immediate clinical or medical reason for the woman’s death,
classified as a direct or indirect maternal death
Determinants
The “causes of the causes” or factors that increased the woman’s
risk of dying from a specific cause
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Slide 5 Review of ClassificationsDirect Causes (≈75%)
hbstetric causes during pregnancy, childbirth and the post-partum period, such as:
• Haemorrhage• Hypertensive disorders• Infection• hbstructed labour• Abortion
Indirect Causes (≈ 25%)aedical conditions that can be aggravated through pregnancy, such as:
• HIV (including TB and pneumonia)
• aalaria• Anaemia• Heart conditions
Social, cultural & environmental factors across a woman’s life course affect risk for direct & indirect causes of death
Slide 6 terinatal Death
Causes
The immediate clinical or medical reason for the fetal or neonatal death classified as a
Ante partum, Intra partum,post partum
Determinants
The “causes of the causes” or factors that increased the fetal or neonatal death risk of dying from a specific
cause
Discuss the time of death
Timing of Death may be unknown
Use other clinical clues (Macerated or freshly dead) to identify timing in case of death.
Slide 7 Review of ClassificationsCauses of still Birth
aaternal cause – hbstructed labour – Ruptured Uterus – treeclampsia/ Eclampsia– AtH (tlacenta previa or abruption) – hbstetric Sepsis and – hthers
Fetal causes – Intrapartum Asphyxia– Cord Accident– Congenital Anomalies and – hther
Causes of Neonatal Deaths – Complications trematurity – Asphyxia – Sepsis/pneumonia/meningitis– Lethal congenital anomaly and – hther
Social, cultural & environmental factors across the fetal and neonate life course affect risk for fetal and neonatal cause of
death
Think of medical causes directly related with the Maternal, Fetal and Neonatal deaths
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Slide 8 Causes of Neonatal Death Ethiopia Global
Source: CHERG/WHO/UNICEF for distribution of causes of neonatal and under-five deaths (published in Liu et al, Lancet 2014).
Source: WHO Global Health Observatory, 2014 (19). Estimates are rounded, and therefore may not sum to 100%.
Complication from Birth like: asphyxia,
Prematurity and
Sepsis and other infections are common causes of neonatal deaths
Slide 9 Contributing Factors
• A contributing factor is something that may have prevented the death if a different circumstance/ effort/action/rout had been taken.
• Although at first glance a death may appear to be due to a single biological cause, further analysis usually reveals a number of contributing factors or underlying causes.
• Often by exploring the event and gaining a better understanding of the root causes, solutions and strategies become more apparent.
• Contributing factors involve missed opportunities within the different levels of health system (individual, household, community and health facility level).
• The following terms can be used interchangeably with contributing factors
– “Avoidable factors”– “Elements of substandard care”– “Modifiable factors”
• The method uses to identify contributing factors is the well-known “Three delays” model
Think of the following factors
contributing factors
Avoidable factors
Elements of substandard care
Modifiable factor
Slide 10 The “3 Delays” aodel
• Generally refers to events following an obstetric emergency, so very specific
• Related to seeking and obtaining clinical care• Divides the process of accessing care into 3
phases:
– Recognising an emergency & need for treatment– Reaching a health facility where care is available– Receiving the care that is needed
Think of
individual or personal factors
community factors health facility factors
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Slide 11 Delay 1: Delay in seeking care
• Were the mother, father or other family members unaware of the need for skilled care for the mother during pregnancy and birth, and for mother and baby in the neonatal period?
• Were they unaware of the warning signs of problems during pregnancy or in newborn infants, or were they reliant on harmful traditional medicine and practices?
• Were there any other sociocultural factors or barriers?
Think of Individual or personal factors
Slide 12 Delay 1: Common contributing factors of aaternal and perinatal death• Family poverty• Did not recognize the danger signs of newborn infants• Unaware of the warning signs of problems during
pregnancy • Did not know where to go• Had no one to take care of other children • Lack of decision to go to the health facility• Traditional beliefs/cultural norms(belief newborns
shouldn’t be taken outside home or seen by certain people
Slide 13 Delay 2: Delay in reaching to a health care facility
• The necessary maternal and/or neonatal health services did not exist, or
• were inaccessible for other reasons. • Was distance or cost a factor? • If there was a delay in travelling to the health-
care facility after a problem was identified, • what were the reasons for this?
Think of community factors between Home and Health Facility
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Slide 14 Delay 2: Common contributing factors of aaternal and perinatal death
• Transport was not available• Transport was too expensive• No facility within reasonable distance • Security concerns
Slide 15 Delay 3: Delay in receiving care in a health facility
• The care the mother and baby received at the health-care facility was not timely or was of poor quality.
• Was this due to provider error, lack of supplies or equipment, or
• Poor management?
Think of Health facility factors affecting maternal health outcome like death.
Slide 16 Delay 3: Common contributing factors of aaternal and perinatal death
• Delayed arrival to next facility from another referring facility
• Family lacked money for health care • Delayed management after admission • Fear to be scolded or shouted at by the staff • Human error or mismanagement and • Delayed or lacking supplies or equipment
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Slide 17 GROUP WORK
• Divide into small groups of 5-6 people• Group will be assigned one of the 3 delays• Discuss what factors in Ethiopia are most likely
to lead to that delay• Identify at least 3 strategies or activities that
targets the factors you identified and might help reduce the delay
Group of 3(D-1,D-2,D-3) each with 5-6 members and grouped will develop a strategy for solving the factors identified in the delays
Slide 18 Summary toints
• Most of maternal and perinatal deaths are preventable • Social determinants are the “causes of the causes” of
maternal and perinatal deaths, and depend on many social levels
• Addressing maternal and perinatal deaths thus requires action at every level, not just medical or health services
• MPDSR identifies determinants related to the 3-delays from individual to the community and to health facility level.
Most maternal and perinatal deaths are preventable if life-saving preventive and therapeutic interventions are provided at the right time
The majority of stillbirths, particularly those that occur in the intrapartum period, and 75% of neonatal deaths are actually preventable.
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Module 3: Identification and Notification Slide 1
aATERNAL & tERINATAL DEATH
SURVEILLANCE:
IDENTIFICATION & NOTIFICATION
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 2 LEARNING hBJECTIVES
1. Identify the sources of information for maternal andperinatal death identification
2. know the notification process of maternal andperinatal deaths
3. Identify the responsible bodies in the notificationprocess
4. Learn how to give code for each maternal andperinatal deaths
5. Learn how to use the identification and notificationtools of maternal and perinatal death surveillance
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 3 aATERNAL AND tERINATAL DEATH SURVEILLANCE
• A single maternal or perinatal death is treated as an outbreak
• A single maternal or perinatal death review informs a lot to prevent many similar deaths in the future
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 4 ShURCES hF INFhRaATIhN FhR aATERNAL DEATH & tERINATAL DEATH IDENTIFICATIhN
ChaaUNITY REthRT What: All probable maternal and perinatal
deaths
WHh: Any member of the community will
report to their respective H.P or H.C
Source: Any rumors in the community
How:
Formally or informally rumors should be
notified within 30 min to the next level by
any means of communication
Formally: ID & N within 24 hrs. using
paper based tools from H.P to H.C
HEALTH FACILITIES’ REthRT What: All confirmed maternal and
perinatal deaths WHh: Any Health care provider should
report to his/her respective facility surveillance focal person
Source: health care providers in the facility Attendants client charts, registers, death logs and other records from the previous 24
hours How: formally within 24 hours of
identification using paper based I.D & N tools
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 5 EARLY SURVEILLANCE ACTIVITIES BEFhRE REVIEW
SUStECTED aATERNAL DEATH
At community
Identify and notify immediately (within 30 min) to PHEM focal person
Report using weekly PHEM(HEW, HC and above)
Investigate with VA
ChNFIRaED aATERNAL DEATH
In Health facility
Identify and notify immediately (within 30 min) to tHEa focal person
Report using weekly PHEM(HC/Hosp/clinic and district/zone/region & above)
Investigate with FBMDA
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 6 Annex 1: Identification and Notification form for maternal death (To be filled in two copies, one copy kept at Ht or reporting ward and the remaining one copy will be documented at health facility surveillance unit) Section one (Notification) 1. Maternal death Notification is reported from Community
Health facility (MRN________________________________ Ward on which death occurred ________________________)
2. Name of the deceased _____________________________________________ 3. Age of the deceased woman (in completed years) ____________________________________________ 4. Name of head of the household: ____________________________________________ 5. Household address Woreda/Sub-city _______________________________
Kebele ______________________________________ Gott _______________________________________ HDA team __________________________________ house number: ______________________________
6. Date and time of the woman’s death DD/MM/YYY ____/____/___________ Time _______________
7. Who informed the death of the woman? 1. HDA 2. Religious leader 3. any community member 4. Self (HEW or Surveillance focal person) 5. Other Health care provider 4. Others (specify) _____
8. Date of Notification: DD/MM/YYY ____/____/___________ 9. Place of death: 1. At Home
2. At Health Post 3. At Clinic 4. At Health Center 5. At Hospital 6. On transit from home to Health facility 7. On transit from health facility to health facility
Screening of notified aaternal deaths [to be filled by Health Extension Worker(Community report) or facility surveillance focal person(H.F report)] 8. Did she die while pregnant? Yes No 9 Did she die with 42 days of termination of pregnancy? Yes No 10 Has she missed her menses before she dies? Yes No Unknown Section two (Classification and decision for investigation) [ To be filled by Facility Surveillance Focal terson(For both H.F report and community based report)] 1. Type of maternal death: ☐Probable ☐Suspected
☐Confirmed 2 If suspected or confirmed maternal death, write ID
number/code ___________________________________________________
Name of reporting person________________________________ signature___________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 7 Annex 7: Identification and Notification Form for Perinatal Deaths (To be filled in two copies, one copy kept at Ht or reporting ward and the remaining one copy will be documented at health facility surveillance unit) Notification (section one)
1. Perinatal death Notification is reported from
Community Health facility (MRN ______________________Ward on which death occurred ________________________)
3. Name of the mother _____________________________________________ 2. Name of head of the household: ____________________________________________ 3. Household address: Woreda/Subcity _______________________________
Kebele ______________________________________ Gott _______________________________________ HDA team __________________________________ house number: ______________________________
4. Date of birth DD/MM/YYY ____/____/___________ Time _____________
5. Date of identification of the death DD/MM/YYY ____/____/___________ Time ______________ 6. Data of notification DD/MM/YYY ____/____/___________ Time ______________ 7. Who informed the death of the
perinatal death 1. HDA 2. Religious leader 3. any community member 4. Self (HEW or Surveillance focal person) 5. Other Health care provider 4. Others (specify) _____
8. Place of still birth/Neonatal death: 1. At home 2. On the way to health post 3. At health post 4. On the way to Health facility (HCs, hospitals) 5. At health facility (HC, Hospital)
Screening of a notified perinatal death to determine whether it is probable, suspected or confirmed [to be filled by Health Extension Worker(community report) or facility surveillance focal person(H.F report)]
9. Was the birth after 7 months of pregnancy? □ Yes □ No
10. Was the newborn dead at birth? □ Yes □ No
11. Did the Baby die within one month (28days) after birth?
□ Yes □ No
Section two (Classification and decision for investigation) [ to be filled by Health Extension Worker(community report) or facility surveillance focal person(H.F report)]
1. Type of perinatal death: probable Suspected Confirmed 2 If suspected or confirmed perinatal death,
write ID number/code ________________________________________________
Name of reporting person________________________________ signature___________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 8 ChDING hF aATERNAL AND tERINATAL DEATHSUStECTED aATERNAL DEATH
• 3 letters from the Region (E.g Oromia: hRh)• 3 letters for the zone (E.g East welega: EWE)• 3 letters for the woreda (E.g Kiramu: KIR)• 3 letters for the health centre (E.g Kokofe: KhK)• 2 letters from Year in Ethiopian calendar that
the death occurred (E.g 2007: 07)• 2 letters from Month number in the Ethiopian
calendar that the death occurred (E.g Hidar: 03)• Serial number for the death in the health
centre in the month of investigation (secondmaternal death: 02)
aaternal death Code:
hRh-EWE-KIR-KhK-07-03-02
SUStECTED tERINATAL DEATH• 3 letters from the Region (E.g Oromia:
hRh)• 3 letters for the zone (E.g East welega:
EWE)• 3 letters for the woreda (E.g Kiramu:
KIR)• 3 letters for the health centre (E.g
Kokofe: KhK)• 2 letters from Year in Ethiopian calendar
that the death occurred (E.g 2007: 07)• 2 letters from Month number in the
Ethiopian calendar that the deathoccurred (E.g Hidar: 03)
• Serial number for the death in thehealth centre in the month ofinvestigation (second perinatal death:02)
terinatal death Code:hRh-EWE-KIR-KhK-07-03- t02
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 9 Exercise
Coding of aaternal And terinatal Deaths
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Practical 3: Assigning ID codes
Answer ASSIGNING AN ID ChDE: Answers will depend on the location of each participant’s home, but in regional trainings, the REGIONAL component of the code is likely to be the same for most correct answers, and the DATE should be the same of everyone. Therefore, the first code should END :
-08-06-01
The second answer is : AaH-HhS-FEL-09-10-t04
NOTE: The Technical Guidance and the trainees’ Workbook have updated full lists of codes.
Assigning an ID Code: This is an individual activity.
Using the reference table above, write down the ID code that would be used for a woman who died on the 5th of the month of Yekatit last year in her home. Assume she lived in the kebele, woreda and zone where YhU live (and select a local health centre accordingly). She was the first maternal death that month (7 minutes)
WRITE the code here:_______________________________________________
Now write down the ID code for a baby who died in Feleg Hiwot hospital in Bahir Dar on 15th day of Sene this year. This baby was the 4th perinatal death reported this month. (7 minutes)
WRITE the code here:_______________________________________________
CHECKING YhUR ChDES: Now turn to the person who are sitting next to and discuss your ID codes and the ones they have written. You should both check each other’s work and discuss any disagreements about how you allocated the codes. Remember that you will both have different correct answers for the first one, as you probably live in different places!
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Slide 10 SUaaARYChathNENTS hF aATERNAL AND tERINATAL DEATH
SURVEILLANCE:IDENTIFICATIhN & NhTIFICATIhN
1. CASE DEFINITION:– Community: Probable and Possible/suspected and– Standard: confirmed
2. Sources of information: What, who, source/fromwhere, and how
3. Tools for Identification and notification4. Coding of suspected and confirmed deaths
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 11 Exercise
Individual Identification and Notificationtractical Exercises
It is better to err on the side of caution – meaning that if there is doubt, better to notify the death so that it can be further investigated.
The Scenarios are also listed in the Workbook. trovide answers only after discussion. Participants should work through each case on their own. There are 6 potential maternal death scenarios, and 6 potential perinatal death scenarios. This activity should take about 45 minutes. Then it is important to lead a discussion with the whole group to go through each case and explain the answers. There may be some disagreements or ambiguities – not all cases are easy to classify! Remember that the purpose is to assess whether the death is likely to be a maternal or perinatal death and thus require a verbal autopsy. Participants should NOT try to diagnose the condition described or assign a cause of death. Try to prevent participants’ getting too preoccupied with specific examples or asking about scenarios that are likely to be extremely rare. As long as standardized classification are applied to most deaths, the system will function.
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Practical 4: Identification Exercise (ANSWERS provided after each scenario)
Maternal Death Identification:
This is an individual exercise. Consider the examples described below and for each, determine if it is a maternal death; if so, which type of maternal death and whether it should be reported.
CIRCLE AS AttRhtRIATE:
Q1. Is this a maternal death ? Yes / No / don’t know Q2. If yes, can it be classified as Direct / Indirect Q3 Should it be reported to the aDSR committee? Yes / No ANSWER
• Yes, maternal death, • direct (haemorrhage), • should be reported
Q1. Is this a maternal death ? Yes / No / don’t know Q2. If yes, can it be classified as Direct / Indirect Q3 Should it be reported to the aDSR committee? Yes / No ANSWER
• Yes, maternal death • Indirect (HIV/TB are affected physiologically by pregnancy) • Should be reported
Example 1
A 24 year old woman delivered a large healthy baby at home. Two hours after delivery she was bleeding heavily with a fast pulse and low blood pressure. She died four hours after delivery.
Example 2
A 36 year old woman is known to be about 6 months pregnant with her 5th pregnancy. She experiences dizziness and night sweats, shortness of breath and has been coughing blood stained sputum. The Doctor diagnosed tuberculosis and found she was HIV positive. She died at 7 months pregnancy of pneumonia .
Example 3
A 31 year old woman is 38 weeks pregnant with her 4th child. She is on her way to the local town walking along the main road with her children when a bus knocks her down. She is unconscious and dies 4 hours after the accident.
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Q1. Is this a maternal death ? Yes / No / don’t know Q2. If yes, can it be classified as Direct / Indirect Q3 Should it be reported to the aDSR committee? Yes / No ANSWER
• No, it is not a maternal death, as the death occurred from incidental causes • Should be notified as a death to a woman of reproductive age, but no Verbal Autopsy is required
Q1. Is this a maternal death ? Yes / No / don’t know Q2. If yes, can it be classified as Direct / Indirect Q3 Should it be reported to the aDSR committee? Yes / No
ANSWER • Yes, it is a maternal death • Direct ( obstructed labour) • Should be reported
Q1. Is this a maternal death ? Yes / No / don’t know Q2. If yes, can it be classified as Direct / Indirect Q3 Should it be reported to the aDSR committee? Yes / No ANSWER
• No/ don’t know, it is not a maternal death- the most likely cause of death is poisoning. • Should be notified as a death to a woman of reproductive age, but not Verbal Autopsy is
required
Example 4
A woman dies very soon after arriving at a health facility. She dies without having delivered, but health personnel at the facility were able to feel fetal parts on vaginal examination. The person accompanying her to the facility reported that she had pains for a day and a half, but could provide no further details.
Example 5
A teenage girl is raped and worries she may be pregnant. Two days after the rape she tells a friend, who gets her some herbal medicine. Four hours after swallowing it she collapses and dies.
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Q1. Is this a maternal death ? Yes / No / don’t know Q2. If yes, can it be classified as Direct / Indirect Q3 Should it be reported to the aDSR committee? Yes / No
ANSWER • yes this is a maternal death • It is direct probably due to septic shock • Should be reported
Perinatal death Identification
Q1. Is this a perinatal death ? Yes / No Q2. If yes, is it probable / suspected/ confirmed Q3. Should it be reported to the atDSR committee? Yes / No ANSWER
• yes this is a perinatal death. It is a confirmed death • This is a stillbirth probably antepartum • Should be reported
Q1. Is this a perinatal death ? Yes / No Q2. If yes, is it probable / suspected/ confirmed Q3. Should it be reported to the atDSR committee? Yes / No ANSWER
Example 6
A teenage girl has unprotected sex and misses her next period. Her boyfriend gives her some herbal medicine to cause an abortion. Two days later she starts to bleed and 5 days after taking the medicine she becomes feverish and has a very offensive-smelling vaginal discharge. After another 2 days she collapses and dies.
Example 1
A 24 year old woman, delivered a dead baby at home. She had felt no fetal movements for 5 days. The baby weighed 3kg and there were no signs of life. hne week earlier she had had an ANC appointment when her fundal height had measured 34 cm.
Example 2
A 35yr old , known to be at full term, with a history of 4 stillbirths and 2 live births delivers a baby weighing 3.4 kg at the hospital. The baby takes a breath at birth but is floppy and makes no further attempt at breathing. Resuscitation is unsuccessful.
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• yes this is a perinatal death. It is a suspected death • This is a early neonatal death • Should be reported
Q1. Is this a perinatal death ? Yes / No Q2. If yes, is it probable / suspected/ confirmed Q3. Should it be reported to the atDSR committee? Yes / No
ANSWER • No, this is not a perinatal death. • The fetus is too small and the history does not support a pregnancy of more than 7 months
gestation. • Should not be reported
Q1. Is this a perinatal death ? Yes / No Q2. If yes, is it probable / suspected/ confirmed Q3. Should it be reported to the atDSR committee? Yes / No ANSWER
• yes this is a perinatal death. It is a probable death as there is no information on gestational age • This is a late neonatal death • Should be reported
Example 3
A 28 year old farmer goes to the health centre with bleeding . She can’t remember her last period. She is admitted to labour ward and passes a baby that is 15cm long
Example 4
A baby that was born uneventfully at home becomes unwell at 23 days of age. He is lethargic and vomits for 2 days before dying at home.
Example 5
A baby was born by Emergency Caesarean Section and shows no signs of life. The CS was done for fetal distress. The mother had pushing down pains and was 7cm dilated. The baby was covered with meconium.
Before the woman went into the hperating Room the fetal heart was heard at 100bpm.
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Q1. Is this a perinatal death ? Yes / No Q2. If yes, is it probable / suspected/ confirmed Q3. Should it be reported to the atDSR committee? Yes / No
ANSWER
• yes this is a perinatal probable death as there is no gestational age documented • This is an intrapartum stillbirth • Should be reported
Q1. Is this a perinatal death ? Yes / No Q2. If yes, is it probable / suspected/ confirmed Q3. Should it be reported to the atDSR committee? Yes / No ANSWER
• No this is not a perinatal death, as it took place after 28 days. • Should NOT be reported
Example 6
A woman delivers a baby weighing 3kg at a health centre and goes home. The baby develops breathing problems and despite receiving treatment dies after 32 days.
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Practice on Using the Identification & Notification Forms
Practical 5: Notifications Maternal death notification
Participants should pretend they are the local health extension worker, who has heard about this woman’s death. They should out Annex 1 (in the Workbook) using the information provided. (They can make up the deceased woman’s residential address).
Perinatal death notification form
Participants should pretend they are the local health extension worker, who has heard about this woman’s death. They should fill out Annex 7 (in the Workbook) using the information provided. (They can make up the deceased baby’s residential address).
No answers available for the identification forms as the information will depend on each individual’s made-up information
INDIVIDUAL WORK: Notification of the death of a woman reported by her Husband
Tigist Abebe had no periods for over 3 months. She was 40 years old and already had 6 children. She had been using an injectible contraceptive. She had been vomiting and bleeding for 6 days and died in her sleep last night.
INDIVIDUAL WORK: Notification of a perinatal death reported by the local priest
A local couple went to the health centre when the woman, who was roughly 6 months pregnant, started bleeding. After several hours of labour, she delivered a live baby girl who died during the night and was buried the next morning.
46
Module 4: Maternal and perinatal death investigation Slide 1
aaternal and terinatal Death Investigation and Verification
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 2 tresentation hutline
Objectives of the Module
Introduction
The Deaths Investigation Process- Community
The Verbal Autopsy Forms
The Death Investigation Process- Health Facilities
The Health Facility Data Abstraction Forms
Summary Exercises
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 3 hbjectives of the aodule
After Completing this module Trainees are expected to
acquire the following knowledge and skills
⇒ Introduce to major principles and prerequisites for maternal
and perinatal death investigation
⇒ Understand the process for maternal and perinatal death
investigation in the community and health facilities
⇒ Acquire the skills to properly use and code the maternal and
perinatal death investigation tools
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
47
Slide 4 Introduction
The objectives of maternal and perinatal deathinvestigation are;• Verify the suspected death• Collect information on possible causes and contributing
factors
Effective investigation of maternal and perinatal deathrequires; Mapping and using all appropriate information sources Approach information sources ethically and sympathetically Using and recording the death investigation tools accurately
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 5 Introduction ChNT . . .
All deaths fulfilling the suspected or standard case definitionshould be investigated
Community- terinatal The birth of a dead foetus or death of a new born after 7 month of pregnancy +New born dead at the time of birth hRwithin 28 days of delivery
Health Facility- terinatalA death of a fetus born after 28completed weeks of gestation orneonatal deaths through the first 28completed days after birth
Community- aaternal Death of a woman of reproductive age group (between 15-49 years of age) + Died while pregnant or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy or missed her menses before she died
Health Facility- aaternalThe death of a woman while pregnant
or within 42 days of the end of pregnancy (irrespective of duration and
site of pregnancy), from any cause related to or aggravated by the
pregnancy or its management but not from accidental or incidental causes
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 6 Deaths Investigation trocess-Community
All suspected maternal and perinatal deaths should be investigated by the health extension worker The community death investigation should be
conducted within two weeks in order to;• Give adequate mourning period for families • Reduce the recall biases
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 7 Community Deaths Investigation ChNT . .
The health extension worker uses the standard verbal autopsy tool to verify and investigate maternal and perinatal deaths in the community
Information sources to complete verbal autopsy includes,• Families of the deceased mother /neonate who were around
the during the death circumstance• Traditional birth attendants- if applicable• Any community member who were around the deceased
during the death circumstance
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 8 Community Deaths Investigation ChNT . .
Before start of interview proper oral consent should be taken and the consent information needs to contain Introduce your self The objectives of the investigation The confidentiality of the information provide
Before and during the interview process respectful, sympathetic and culturally right approaches should be followed
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 9 Verbal Autopsy
The objective of verbal autopsy is to verify the suspected deaths in the
community and collect basic information to identify possible causes and
contributing factors
Verbal autopsy is used by health extension workers only for maternal and
perinatal death which fulfill the community suspected cased definition
There is a separate verbal autopsy forms for maternal deaths and
perinatal deaths
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 10 Verbal Autopsy ChNT . . .
The verbal autopsy form for maternal death contains five
sections to be completed for all suspected maternal deaths in
the community
The verbal autopsy form for perinatal death contains nine parts
and to be completed for all suspected perinatal deaths in the
community
When both the mother and the neonate are deceased maternal
and perinatal verbal autopsy forms should be completed
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 11
Community Level Data Capture(verbal Autopsy)
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 12 • Collect data from family members,
friends, neighbors, and potentially HEW on circumstances around death
• Help construct the “pathway to death” including background factors
• Investigates – the woman’s or the babies health issues, – decisions about care, – services received, and – community factors (e.g. Transportation)
Verbal Autopsies
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 13 Any community member can alert HEW about deaths of women 15-49
– HEW identify deaths, report them as part of PHEM, screen for maternal causes, and notify HC
– Data from VA presented at the HC review committee
Community Data Collection - process
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 14 • Timing is important – VA should be
conducted after the mourning period, but before key details are forgotten (roughly 2 weeks after the death)
• Important to find respondents familiar with the case and events leading up to it
• Families may have separated or moved
Logistical Issues
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 15 • Maternal and Perinatal deaths are
emotional events• Grief of the family must be respected• Information provided must be voluntary• There should be no repercussions for
family members’ actions• The VA process can raise sensitive issues
requiring support (disagreements, abortion, lack of available care)
Ethical Issues
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 16 Informed Consent
• Formally establishes voluntary participation
• Reassures family members• Can offer legal protection to
communities• Builds rapport and trust before starting
data collection
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 17 When obtaining Informed Consent, remember to mention ...
– Purpose of the VA interview– What will happen during the interview– Risks involved (feeling uncomfortable, sad) – Benefits (avoiding future deaths)– Confidentiality – Voluntary participation
Informed Consent:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 18
• Planning a community visit• Approaching the household• Selecting the best respondent(s)• Obtaining Informed Consent• Conducting the VA interview• Recording the information accurately• Submitting the filled format to the
Health Centre
Steps in Conducting VA:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 19 • Friendly approach – Explain the
purpose of your visit in positive terms• Ensure privacy – Interviews will go more
smoothly if you are undisturbed• Speak slowly & clearly – explain
anything that the respondent doesn’t understand
• Probe for detailed information
Best tractices for Verbal Autopsy (1)
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 20 • There are NO “right answers” - let
respondents tell their story in their own words
• Take notes – write down additional relevant information in the blank spaces of the VA form
• Pay attention – show that you are listening & aware of respondents’ emotions
Best tractices for Verbal Autopsy (2)
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 21 Deaths Investigation trocess- Health Facilities
All maternal and perinatal deaths which fulfil the standard case definitions should be investigated
The health facility death investigation should be conducted within 1 week in order to;• Get all the necessary medical registers timely • Reduce the recall biases • Avail timely information for service quality improvement
The surveillance officer uses the standard facility data abstraction form to investigate and verify maternal and perinatal deaths in the health facility
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 22 Deaths Investigation trocess ChNT . . .
Information sources to complete data abstraction includes,– Medical records- client chart, registers, death logs,
operation notes– Health care providers in the facility who involved in the
provision of health care Before start of interview with health care providers proper
consent should be taken and the consent information needs to contain Introduce your self (if useful) The objectives of the investigation The no bale principles of the MPDSR The confidentiality of the information provide
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 23 Health Facility Data Abstraction Form
The objective of the facility data abstraction form is to verify deaths in the
health facilities and collect basic information to identify of possible causes
and contributing factors
Facility based data abstraction form is used by surveillance officer only for
maternal and perinatal death which fulfill the standard cased definition
There is a separate facility data abstraction form for maternal deaths and
perinatal deaths
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 24 Data Abstraction ChNT . . .
The data abstraction form for maternal death contains
four sections to be completed for all maternal deaths
The data abstraction form for perinatal death contains
eight parts and to be completed for all perinatal deaths
within
When both the mother and the neonate are deceased
maternal and perinatal data abstraction form should be
completed
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 26 Exercise: Verbal Autopsy
• Exercise on how to fill the maternal and perinatal death verbal autopsy forms
Verbal Autopsy- Maternal Death Verbal Autopsy- Perinatal Death
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Practical 6: Community level investigation using Verbal Autopsy This is a GRhUt activity. Participants should get into groups of 5-6 people, and consider the scenario below. The screening process has found that the death of Tigist was likely to be a maternal death. One group member should take the role of the Verbal Autopsy interviewer, and the others can play the role of family members with relevant knowledge (the husband, mother, sister etc). The objective is to go through the VA form together (Annex 2) and practice trying to fill in as much of the information as possible, using realistic information provided by the members of the group.
No answers available for verbal autopsy form as the information will depend on each group’s discussion
Tigist Abebe had no periods for over 3 months. She was 40 years old and already had 6 children. She had been using an injectible contraceptive. She had been vomiting and bleeding for 6 days and died in her sleep last night.
Role tlay: The interviewer should go through the tool with the other family and community members and fill out the form as best as possible. The others should not make the activity too easy for the interviewer! As a group, reflect on the following:
• Which sections of the VA form are easy to fill out? • Which are difficult? • What might be the challenges of obtaining reliable VA information?
55
Slide 27 Exercise: Facility Based Abstraction :
• Exercise on how to fill the maternal and perinatal death facility based abstraction from by using anonymous clinical cases
Facility Based Abstraction Form-maternal DeathFacility Based Abstraction Form- Perinatal Death
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Practical 7: Facility level investigation using the Facility Based Abstraction Form N.B The Case Notes will be made available during the training but will be collected at the end of the session.
The following Date was only available on the anonymised case “BA” that was provided for the national ToT. If you use a different anonymised case, new answers will need to be developed
ANSWERS:
The following Date was only available on the anonimized case “BA”.
General information of the deceased:
1. Date and time of birth: 04/04/2009 EC at 9:14PM 2. Status of the newborn at birth: Alive 3. Date and time of perinatal death: 05/04/2009 EC at 300 am 4. Sex of the deceased: Male 5. Place of death: Hospital
General information of the mother:
1. Age:25 years
Transfer of raw data from anonymised clinical notes to the facility based abstraction Form. This is an small group activity (2-3 people).
1. Using the notes provided on a perinatal death, complete as much of the facility based abstraction form as possible
2. Return the notes at the end of the session, as these are confidential
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2. Is the mother alive: Yes General obstetric history of the mother:
1. Number of pregnancies :1 ANC history of the mother during pregnancy:
1. ANC: Yes 2. Place of ANC: Unknown 3. Did the mother receives … ?: Iron and TT 4. Maternal disease or condition: Unknown
Intra partum history of the mother:
1. GA: 42+5 2. Partograph use : No 3. Fetal heart beat during labor: Persistent Tachycardia 4. Mode of delivery: C/S 5. Place of birth : Hospital 6. Total duration of labor :20 hours 7. Total duration of rupture of membranes: 4 hours 8. APGAR score at 1st and 5th minute : 7 and 8 9. Birth weight of the baby: 2800gm 10. HC: 34.5cm 11. Who assisted the delivery: Obstetrician 12. Problem experienced during labor: Obstructed Labor
Postnatal history of the perinatal death:
1. Baby receive: Vitamin K 2. Baby problem: Birth asphyxia and meconium aspiration syndrome
Cause and time of death
1. 1ry cause of death : Meconium aspiration syndrome with respiratory failure 2. Timing of death: Between 1st and 7th day
Contributing factors:
1. Delay 2: Delay referral from the health center
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Slide 28 Summary of the aodule
Community Maternal and Perinatal Deaths Investigation Processo The Prerequisite for investigation- Suspected case
definitions o The Investigation process o The verbal autopsy forms
Maternal and Perinatal Deaths Investigation Process In Health Facilitieso The Prerequisite for investigation- standard case
definitions o The Investigation process o The data abstraction forms
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Module 5: Maternal and perinatal death review Slide 1
aaternal and terinatal Deaths Review
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
58
Slide 2 • Community – Review of suspected Maternal deaths• Facility – Review of suspected Maternal deaths• Setting up MPDSR system at facility• Data quality improvement
– Confidentiality: a Code of conduct – Disclaimer pledge – Committee discussion
• Summary Points• Exercise on MDRF and PDRF
hutline:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 3 • Each completed verbal autopsy should
be reviewed by the rapid response team (RRT) of the respective health center within one week after Verbal autopsy report is received.
• The Health Center RRT should include midwives, MCH nurses and other MCH related health professionals.
Community–Review of suspected aaternal and perinatal deaths:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 4
• For every reviewed verbal autopsy an action plan has to be developed for response based on the identified modifiable factors
• Following the review of the verbal autopsy the RRT will complete the case based reporting format (maternal/Perinatal death reporting format (MDRF/PDRF)
Community–Review of suspected aaternal and perinatal deaths:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
59
Slide 5 • Each completed FBAF should be
reviewed by the rapid response team (RRT) of the respective health facility within one week.
• The health facility RRT should include midwives, NICU Nurses, ESOs, GPs, Health officers, obstetrician, pediatrician and other related health professionalsworking in obstetrics or neonatal care of that particular facility.
Facility –Review of suspected aaternal and perinatal deaths deaths:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 6
• For every reviewed FBMDA/FBPDA an action plan has to be developed for response based on the identified modifiable factors.
• Following the review of the FBMDA and FBPDA, the health facility surveillance focal person will complete the case based reporting format (maternal/perinatal death reporting format (MDRF/PDRF)
Facility –Review of suspected aaternal and perinatal deaths:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 7
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 8 Setting up atDSR system at facility:
During the “Set Up” phase, facilities should:
– Raise awareness and provide training for all staff
– Schedule regular, routine facility reviews– Appoint a MPDSR coordinator who relates
well to other staff, is supportive and respected
– Invite local experts to join committee from backgrounds other than medical/midwifery
– Engage senior staff and managers
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 9 To improve the data quality for FBAF, MDSR committee members and data collectors have their great role1. Role of data collector
– Ensuring data quality– Maximizing data capture– Summarizing cases for presentation at review
2. MPDSR Facility committeeRoles and responsibility
– Constructive discussion and taking key decisions
Data quality improvement:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 10 Data quality improves when...• All members of staff understand the purpose of the
data collection• There is good coordination across the facility
departments for collecting and synthesizing data• Multiple sources are used (case notes, records from
admission, surgery theatre, mortuary e.t.c)• Notes are legible
Once the process of data collection becomes routine, reporting and quality often improve as staff realize their notes and records will be looked at and used!
Data quality improvement:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 11 Data capture• Include all sources of information if
women/ neonate received care at multiple sites
• Every effort should be made to include information from accompanying family members
• A summary of the chain of events should be generated (description of events leading to the death)
Data quality improvement:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 12
Reminder: Committee Roles• Multi disciplinary to bring in different perspectives
and ideas• Preserves the anonymity of patients and staff
(through non-disclosure pledge)• Maintains a “No Blame” culture• Reports objectively on cases• Identifies actions and provides required feedback to
all concerned• Coordinates with community reviews – essential to
build a complete picture
Data quality improvement:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 13
• Local data collectors and involved health care workers are the only staff who see the names of deceased
• Knowledge contained within review committees
• All individuals (including committee members) who access identifying data sign a non-disclosure confidentiality agreement (kept on record)
Confidentiality: a Code of conduct :
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 14 (Non-disclosure confidentiality agreement)We, the members of the ---- reviewcommittee, agree to maintain anonymityand confidentiality for all the casesdiscussed at this meeting, held on [DATE].We pledge not to talk to anyone outside thismeeting about details of the eventsanalyzed here, and will not disclose thenames of any individuals involved, includingfamily members or health care providers.
Disclaimer pledge :
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 15
Five key decisions1. Cause of death2. Death classification
Direct/indirect/incidental 3. Relevant delays4. Preventability Lessons learnt are
applied to prevent further deaths 5. Actions
Committee discussion:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 16
• Quality of notes and records are vital to the success of facility based reviews
• Data must be obtained from all relevant sources (departments where woman treated, other health services she attended, family members)
• The whole team should review cases and contribute to taking the key 5 decisions
Summary toints:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
63
Slide 17 atDSR Case based reporting(aDRFs and tDRFs)
• The Health facility RRT ( including aCH experts) meets to discuss the case
• The committee agrees on the major delays involved
• The RRT decides on any local actions needed to prevent further similar deaths
• The surveillance focal person is responsible for completing the aDRF and tDRF (case based reporting format) and sending it up the system
• A UNIQUE ID is also given to aDRF/tDRFS
Attention should be given to theCompleteness of MDRF and PDRFs
Completed forms should be sent timely within 48 hrs from level to level
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 18 aaternal death reporting form (aDRF)
• Reporting Health facility information
• Deceased information• Antenatal Care (ANC),
Delivery and tostnatal care (tNC) / tost abortion care(tAC)
• Causes of death• Contributory factors
Includes five sections
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 19 terinatal death reporting form (tDRF)
• Reporting Health facility information
• Deceased information• General information of
the mother• hbstetric History of the
mother in relation to the deceased case
• terinatal Cause of death• Contributory factors
Includes six sections
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 20
Exercise how to fill and review the MDRF or PDRF
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Practical 8: Using the Case Based Reporting Form There are 2 case based forms that will be filled out by the Rapid Response Team (RRT) / review committee. The form is filled out during the discussion about each case, based on the Verbal Autopsy or Facility Based Abstraction Form.
The maternal or perinatal death reporting form identifies the causes of the death, contributing delays, and determines whether or not the death was preventable.
This is a GRhUt activity. Work in the same group as for the Verbal Autopsy practice.
Review the case from the provided medical notes on a perinatal death. This time, instead of looking at the raw notes, you should use the Facility Based Abstraction Form. Conduct a review meeting (role play) – each group member should take a role, e.g. Health facility director, Surveillance officer, midwife, quality officer, etc.
Remember to maintain confidentiality and anonymity at all times!
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Answer: Annex 10 in National MPDSR Guidance: Perinatal Death Case Based Report Form (PDRF)
(To be filled in 5 copies by the Health Centre/hospital. Send the rest of copies to the next level by keeping one copy)
Reporting Facility Information Reporting Health Facility name type(H.C/Cl./Hosp):________________x___________ Woreda: ______y____________ Zone:_______z__________ Region: _____xx____________ Date of Reporting DD/MM/YYYY ____/____/_____ This PDRF is extracted from: 1. VA 2. Facility based Perinatal death abstraction form Deceased Information Deceased ID(code): ______________________________________________________________ Residence of deceased/parents Urban Rural n/k
Region_______n/k__________________ Zone_________n/k_______________________ Woreda________n/k______________________ Kebele ___________________________
Date and time of birth DD/MM/YYYY __04_/__04__/___09_/ Day ☐ Night ☒ (hrs/min)__21__/__15__ Date and time of death (Not applicable for stillborn)
DD/MM/YYYY ____05_/_04_____/_09_____/ Day ☐ Night ☒ Time in (hrs/min)_____03_/_00______
Sex of the deceased 1. aale 2. Female Estimated gestational age at delivery in weeks ______42____________ weeks Place of Death
1. Home/ Relatives’ Home 2. Health Post
3. Health Centre 4. Hospital
5. In Transit 6. During referral (from facility to facility )
General information of the mother Is the mother of the deceased perinate alive? Yes ☒ No ☐ Age of the mother________25_____(years Parity____0_________ Number of alive children ____0__________ Religion of the mother 1. Orthodox 2. Muslim 3. Protestant 4.Catholic 5. Others (specify)-
_______n/k_______ Educational status Of the mother
1.No formal Education 2.No formal education, but can read and write
3.Elementary school 4. High school
5. College and above 6. Unknown
Occupation of the mother
1.Pofessional 2.Clerical 3.Sales and Services
4.Manual Skilled 5. Manual Unskilled 6. Agriculture
7. Unemployed 8. Others (Specify) ___n/k______________
hbstetric History of the mother in relation to this deceased case Number of ANC visits in relation to the deceased case ( report “0” if no ANC visits ) ______?4 ANC_____________ Number of TT vaccine during the pregnancy of the deceased case: 1. No TT 2. One TT 3. Two and above TT n/k Mode of delivery of the deceased baby 1. SVD 2. Operative vaginal delivery 3. Forceps 4. Vacuum 5. C/S Status of the baby at birth Alive/live born ☒ Dead/Still birth ☐ if alive APGAR score at 5th minute ____7_______ Where was the deceased baby born? 1. Home 2. On transit 3. H/post 4. H/center 5. Hospital 6.Clinic
Maternal disease or condition identified__________none___________________________________________________________
terinatal Cause of death Neonatal Cause of death 1. Complications
Prematurity 2. Asphyxia 3. Sepsis/pneumonia/meningitis 4. Neonatal Tetanus
5. Lethal congenital anomaly 6. Other ______________
Maternal causes of death
1. hbstructed labor 2. Ruptured Uterus
3. Preeclampsia/ Eclampsia 4. APH (Placenta previa or abruption)
5. Obstetric Sepsis 6.Others_______________________
Timing of the death
1. Antepartum stillbirth 2. Intrapartum stillbirth
3. Still birth of un known time 4. Death In the first 24 after birth
5. Death Between 1st day and 7 day 6. Death Between 8 day and 28 days
Is the death preventable? 1= Yes 2= No 3= Unknown Contributory factors (Thick all that apply) Delay 1 1. Family poverty
2. Did not recognize the danger signs of newborn infants
3. Unaware of the warning signs of problems during pregnancy
4. Did not know where to go 5. Had no one to take care of other children 6. Reliant on traditional practice/medicine 7. Lack of decision to go to the health facility
Delay 2 1. Transport was not available 2. Transport was too expensive
3. No facility within reasonable distance 4. Lack of road access 5. Others _______________________
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Delay 3 1. Delayed arrival to next facility from another referring facility 2. Family lacked money for health care 3. delayed management after admission- sent to GhDt 4. Fear to be scolded or shouted at by the staff
5. Human error or mismanagement’ and 6. Delay in first evaluation by care giver after admission 7. Lack of supplies or equipment, specify___Chest XRay
______________ Reported by: ______________________ signature: _______________ seal
The probable cause of death in this case was meconium aspiration syndrome. The main issues which should be identified in this case are
• Delay in referral of mother from home and/or the health centre • Arrival at the hospital with suboptimal documentation eg. Mothers ANC history, length of stay
at the health centre and any interventions undertaken • Delay at the Hospital as the mother was initially taken to GOPD resulting in repeated
unnecessary evaluations • Suboptimal management on NICU with
o lack of senior supervision for a critically ill infant, o lack of diagnostic Chest X Ray over 29 hours o lack of documentation on vital signs sheet including lack of fluid balance o possible human error resulting in very high blood glucose levels possibly secondary to
glucose administration • Poor documentation both before and after delivery, particularly in relation to dates and times
and interchange between Ethiopian and international time
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Module 6: Data aggregation,analysis and interpretation and reporting Slide 1
aaternal & terinatal DeathSurveillance and Response (atDSR):
Data Analysis, Interpretation, Reporting
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 2 Learning objectivesBy the end of this session, participants will :
• Identify MPDSR reporting tools and periodicity of reporting
• Be familiar with MPDSR data flow and mechanisms of monitoring & ensuring data quality
• Perform basics of MPDSR data analysis, aggregation and interpretation
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 3 hutline of the presentation
• Introduction• Classification of MPDSR reporting within PHEM• Weekly Maternal and Perinatal deaths reporting• MPDSR Case based reporting (MDRF&PDRF)• MPDSR Data quality • Data analysis- aggregation and interpretation • Use of aggregated MPDSR data for
programmatic response
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 4 Introduction
Ensuring reliable reporting of Maternal and Perinatal death surveillance data throughout the system is important so that program managers, surveillance officers and other health care staff can use of this information to respond with actions that will prevent future deaths
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 5 Introduction(2)
It is not enough to collect, record and report information about aaternal and terinatal deaths;
The data must also be analyzed closest to the community with the appropriate analytical skills; minimum at the district level
Analyzing data provides the information that is used to take relevant, timely and appropriate public health action
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 6 WRF_ for HEWs
DISEASE C D DISEASE C D DISEASE C D
AFP/Polio Fever + RashHemorrhagicDiseases
Anthrax Neonatal Tetanus Guinea worm
Acute WateryDiarrhea
Influenza Like Illnesses
Deaths of women of reproductive age (15-49)years
RabiesOther(specify):__________
Birth of a dead fetus or death of a newborn
Other (specify):_
Section II. Summary for Immediately Reportable Diseases/Conditions:
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 7 WRF (HF & above)
DISEASE/Event C D DISEASE/Event C D DISEASE/Eve
nt C D
AFP/Polio Measles SARS
Anthrax NeonatalTetanus Small pox
CholeraPandemic Influenza
Viralhemorrhagicfever
Dracunculiasis (Guineaworm) Rabies Yellow fever
Maternal DeathOther (specify):
Other(specify):
Perinatal death
Section III. Summary for Immediately Reportable Case-based Disease / Conditions
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 8 Data quality-Weekly reporting
trogress of completeness and timeliness of aaternal and terinatal death reporting at all levels should be monitored• Actions can be taken to improve completeness
and timeliness• When the surveillance system is good, the rates
these two indicators should approach 100%• If no cases of death (maternal or perinatal death)
have been identified during the week, a “zero” is actively reported
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 9 Analysis – data aggregation and interpretation
Aim?• To identify causes of death,• Subgroups at highest risk, • To identify factors contributing to maternal
deaths,• To assess the emerging data patterns• prioritize the most important health problems to
improve the public health responseIt also helps to identify changes in reporting especially at initial stages of implementation
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 10 Analysis – data aggregation and interpretation
• Receive, handle and store data from reporting sites• Data entry, quality and completeness • Aggregating reported Weekly notifications and case
based reports• terform standard data analysis plan• terform specialized complex analysis or sub analysis,• Analyze preventable factors• Translate data analysis for broader audience• Respond, disseminate results and recommendations,
and implement a&E
Steps
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 11 Analysis – data aggregation and interpretation
Basic atDSR data analysis includes;• Basic descriptive analysis by person, place, and
time• aedical cause of death,• Contributing factors and preventability of death• tatterns and trends , and
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 12 Analysis – data aggregation and interpretation
• Tabulating reports manually and filling in a summary data sheet
• Using aicrosoft excel (tivot tables , charts and running formulas)
• Running a standard computer program to generate a summary report (EtI Info 7 database /dashboard ,or other standardized databases)
How ?
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Slide 13 Annual report
Regional and National aDSR TWGs will produce Annual reports which will demonstrate trends in numbers, cause of death and contributory factors and geographical distributionA certain amount of basic epidemiological data will be included in these reports The reports should be disseminated for wider utilization
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Slide 20
Exercise on Data Analysis
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Practical 9: Interpreting data NOTE: Answers provided in BhLD after each question
Instructions: Please read the case study and then discuss the questions with your assigned group
members.
Case study: Pretend you are the woreda-level MPDSR focal person responsible for monitoring MPDSR
reporting and preparing the data for discussion and also to report upwards.
In your woreda, maternal death surveillance started at the beginning of 2009 EFY. Notification of
maternal deaths and case based reports (MDRF) have been sent from catchment health facilities
throughout your woreda (details below). For maternal deaths, you have received a total of 13 weekly
notifications and 22 case based reports in the last 2 quarters of 2009. The total population for 2009 EFY
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was 284,604 (CSA projection) with crude birth rate of 32 per 1000 populations. (MMR of 412 per
100,000 LBs)
Table 1. aaternal deaths notification reports by reporting month
Month Year No-of-Gov_HPexpectd
No-of-Gov_HCexpectd
No-of-GovHospexpectd
No-of-Other HFs expectd
No-of-Gov_HP Reportd
No-of-Gov_HCs Reported
No-of-Gov_HospReportd
No-of-OthersHF Report
Maternal Deaths
Tir 2009 38 12 1 2 38 11 1 2 2 Yekatit 2009 38 12 1 2 23 11 1 2 2 Megabit 2009 38 12 1 2 33 11 0 2 5 Miazia 2009 38 12 1 2 38 11 1 2 0 Ginbot 2009 38 12 1 2 36 11 0 2 3 Senie 2009 38 12 1 2 38 11 1 2 1
1. Looking at the data on reporting above, review the completeness of the maternal death weekly
reports. Answer the following questions:
o Which month had the lowest reporting rate from Health Posts? ________________
ANSWER: Yekatit_(just 23 HP out of 38)___
o How many “silent” health centres are there in your woreda (meaning they are not
sending any reports)? __ANSWER: 1 (12 Health centres are expected, but just 11 report
each month)
o Which category of health facilities has the best reporting? _ANSWER: “Other” health
facilities – it is 2 out of 2 for every month _
2. Now look at Table 2 (provided separately), which provides the details of all 22 maternal deaths
reported through MDRF in the past 6 months. Using this data, calculate the following:
o How many of the deaths were considered preventable? ANSWER: 17
o What proportion of all the deaths was this? ANSWER: 77.3 % (17/22)
o Give the percentage breakdown (% out of 100) for timing of death
Antepartum ___ANSWER: 13.6% (3/22)
Intrapartum __ ANSWER: 13.6% (3/22)
Postpartum __ ANSWER : 72.7% (16/22)
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o What is the commonest cause of death among reported cases? ANSWER: Haemorrhage =
63.6% (14/22)
What is the second largest? ANSWER: We don’t really know – “direct others” has the next
highest number, 4 deaths _
o What is the contribution of each delay? i.e. determine the percentage of deaths to which
Delay 1, Delay 2, and Delay 3 were listed as contributing factors.
ANSWER:
Delay 1= 14 deaths have one of the Delay 1 factors mentioned = 63.6% Delay 2= 8 deaths have one of the Delay 2 factors mentioned = 36.3% Delay 3= 5 deaths have one of the Delay 3 factors mentioned = 22.7%
o These percentages add up to more than 100%, why is this?
Answer: For 1 maternal death, it is possible to have more than one delay contributing to it, for example if there was a delay in deciding to seek help (Delay 1) and then a delay at the health facility in receiving the correct treatment (Delay 3)
3. Based on your data interpretation, identify 3 key points to present to the Woreda RRT members
for discussion?
Possible answer include:
• Reporting is still patchy and not 100% of facilities report every month
• Most maternal deaths occur during the postpartum period
• Haemorrhage is the most significant cause of death
• Delay in seeking care occurs in the majority of maternal deaths
• Better data are needed from the review process to try to determine the most likely cause
of death to avoid such a high number reported in the “other” category.
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Module 7: Response Slide 1
ahVING Th ACTIhN:Identifying Responses in atDS
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Slide 2 Learning objectivesBy the end of this session, participants will be able to:
• Understand the central role of actionin the atDSR process
• Identify actions appropriate to every level of the health system
• Use the action tool and support its implementation
• List ‘evidence based actions’
Think of avoidable contributing causes and then SMART actions
Slide 3
Taking action to reduce avoidable maternal and perinatal deaths is the reason for conducting
MPDSR
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Slide 4
What are appropriate actions?
It is preferable to acheive a few achievable actions rather than many unacheivable ones
Slide 5 What are evidence based actions?Actions for which there is over whelming evidence that
maternal and/or perinatal mortality will be prevented if they are followed.
• hften refer to clinical actions, based on trials• Individual cases should be assessed to see if
“best practices” were carried out or not• If not, appropriate action should be taken to
ensure these are implemented to prevent further deaths
• Ethiopian Guidelines (FahH) for A/N and intrapartum care provide details
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Slide 6 General
• Family planning• ANC and birth
preparedness plans• Iron supplements• Good Referrals• Kangaroo care• Health education &
promotion
Emphasise family planning which has been shown to cut MMR by 25%
None of these are expensive especially quality ANC and kangaroo care
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Slide 7 Eclampsia
• Diagnosis and treatment of high blood pressure
• aagnesium Sulphate
• Timely delivery
Timely delivery is the priority in treatment.
Once the placenta is removed the process of preeclampsia or eclampsia will start to reverse
Slide 8 Haemorrhage
• Active management of third stage of labour
• aisoprostil• Blood transfusion
(dependent on environment)
This is the biggest killer in Ethiopia , all health facilities must have oxytocics In the 2016 EmONC 17% had experienced in the last 3 months
Slide 9 Sepsis
• Clean delivery• Antibiotics for
prolonged ruptured membranes at term
• Antibiotics for C/S • Avoid prolonged
delivery
A recurring story from the first few reports of MDSR in Ethiopia is of women with long labours and prolonged ruptured membranes not getting timely triple antibiotics
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Slide 10 Abortion
• Availability of safe abortion
• Availability of post abortion care including safe aVA or D&C and i/v antibiotics
Death from abortion has decreased in Ethiopia in the last decade but care is still required , especially around timely antibiotics and safe practice
Slide 11 hbstructed labour
• Facility delivery after 12 hours of labour
• Use of partograph• Availability of C/S
2016 EmONC showed a good increase in the use of the partograph but poor use of the alert and action lines EmONC.
Slide 12 trematurity
• Ultrasound use• Antenatal steroid
injections• Kangaroo mother care• Immediate and
frequent breastfeeding• Available antibiotics
Antenatal steroids were given in just 5% of premature deliveries according to 2016 EmONC survey
Kangaroo mother care was used in just 46% of premature deliveries in Ethiopia according to EmONC
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Slide 13 Non clinical actions
• Not all problems identified during the review and analysis have clinical solutions
• Actions in the community e.g. Changing health-seeking behaviour, addressing transportation, reducing costs of accessing care, also play a role.
• Community participation can help identify barriers and feasible solutions.
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Slide 14 Criteria for ActionsResponses to MPDSR data need to meet the
following criteria at every level (Be SMART!)• Specific: state exactly what needs to happen• aeasurable: it must be possible to check
whether the action has been implemented• Achievable: choose responses that you can
complete given available resources• Realistic: each action must be feasible in the
local context• Timely: set a deadline for completing actions
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Slide 15 trioritising!
It is vital to prioritse actions .
Only one or two of these donkeys will get enough to eat !
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Slide 16 How do you select responses?During the review process:
• “Brainstorm” possible actions• Identify those most likely to have a
large impact• Check that they meet the SaART criteria• Try to address all 3 “delays”• Think of prevention as well as solutions!
If someone has died of haemorrhage and anaemia an appropriate action with more impact will be to ensure all women get iron antenatally than blood transfusion is made available at health centre level.
The action of blood transfusion at health centre level is unachievable .
Slide 17
Timing of Responses
Some actions are immediate but others take time
Slide 18 Immediate Actions• Almost every maternal or perinatal death can lead to
immediate actions to prevent similar deaths from occurring • There is no need to wait for aggregated data to begin
implementing action• Common examples include
– Increasing availability of skilled providers– Changing the system for access to the drug cupboard– Training in management of emergencies– Moving the area for critically ill patients
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Slide 19 Immediate action example
• At a hospital 2 women died within a few weeks following surgery for a ruptured uterus.
• Both women died within a few hours of surgery.• Review of the recovery area showed staff
shortages and lack of guidelines. • Actions
o Recovery area placed close to nurses’ desko New guidelines and care plans put in placeo Staffing prioritised for the new recovery area
• All carried out within 5 days of the second death!
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Slide 20 teriodic actions
• teriodic reviews may show patterns of problems or “hot spots” with excess maternal deaths
• Findings should lead to addressing problems comprehensively across multiple facilities or communities.
• In areas at higher risk, discussion with local communities are crucial to identify solutions.
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Slide 21 Example of periodic actions
• A referral hospital was noted to have a high proportion of newborn deaths.
• An audit of all cases of newborn deaths was conducted.
• Two catchment area woredas were found to be ‘hot spots’.
• Actionso Discussions with woredas, which found slow
referrals and poor transport o New ambulances deployed to these woredas and
midwives provided with refresher training on partograph use and timely referral
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Slide 22 teriodic responses at different levelsCommunity
• Improved community awareness of risk factors and danger signs
• Iron supplementation• Increasing uptake of ANC and birth
preparedness• Family planning promotion• Improvement in transport
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Slide 23 teriodic Facility level response
• Strengthen referral mechanisms• Improve 24/7 care by allocating staff
across all shifts• aake a generator available and
maintain it• trovide refresher training and
support to staff• Create a “no blame” culture
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Slide 24 Long Term (Regional & National)
• Analysis of aggregated data and recommendations from maternal death reviews
• All regions incorporated in an annual report contributing to a national maternal health plan
• At national level, a longer-term strategic plan (3–5 years) is developed to focus on – Key priorities identified across many districts – Key geographic areas where more women are dying
or the risk of dying is greater– Required changes or updates to national policies,
laws or guidelines.
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Slide 25 Long term response: facility
• Every hospital and HC should summarize maternal & perintal mortality findings annually.
• In larger facilities, findings should contribute to continuous quality improvement plans.
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Slide 26 Example of annual response- facility
• Following the publication of a hospital’s annual report it was found that the majority of maternal deaths followed ttH
• Actions– Introduction of mandatory annual training on
management of ttH for all doctors and midwives, including team training.
– System for ordering oxytocic drugs changed to ensure availability at all times
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Slide 27 Woreda Long Term Response
Actions at the district level may include health-system strengthening:
– Reduce barriers to good health-seeking – Check ambulance distribution and maintenance
policies– Equip health facilities with essential supplies
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Slide 28 Regional Long Term Response
Actions at the RHB level may include health-system strengthening:
– Fill training gaps– Identify “hot spots” and assess their resource
needs– Work across the region to address non-health
sector determinants e.g. electricity supply/ road infrastructure
– Distribute manuals, guidelines, atDSR forms– aobilise resources for aNCH quality improvement
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Slide 29 National Response
EtHI and the FahH should facilitate the following in response to atDSR data:
– aonitor weekly surveillance and provide support to strengthen reporting system
– troduce necessary guidelines and protocols– Avail essential reproductive health commodities– troduce standards i.e. for referrals– Facilitate intersectoral collaboration to address
common maternal and newborn health problems– Work for adequate budget allocation for aNCH
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Slide 30 Response Accountability• An individual within the review committee
should take responsibility for monitoring agreed actions
• trogress should be reported on at every meeting. • If actions are not being implemented, a
discussion should determine why• New actions can be taken or efforts intensified to
complete previously selected responses • All actions should link to existing quality
improvement initiatives and institutional plans
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Slide 31 Regular Feedback
• Feedback helps maintain staff motivation and sense of participation in the review process
• Appropriate and timely feedback is part of the response process
• Feedback should emphasise positive action and good practice in addition to pointing out gaps
• Feedback across the system maintains continuity and the flow of information in both directions
• Feedback can be written as well as verbal – e.g. annual facility reports circulated among staff
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Slide 32
Exercise on Responses
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NhTE: This is a multiprofessional activity
A 25-year old in her second pregnancy attended ANC x 4 at the health post
In her first pregnancy she had a normal delivery at home and the baby is now 2 years of age and doing well
In the second pregnancy at 28 weeks and again at 36 weeks the midwife thought the fundus was big compared with the stated menstrual dates
The woman complained of being very uncomfortable and finding it difficult to sleep
At 36 weeks the midwife at the health centre referred the woman to the local hospital with polyhydramnios for further management
At the local hospital an Ultrasound showed a twin pregnancy with one absent Fetal heart, the presenting/leading twin had an FH of 140bpm
The obstetric resident decided to induce labour with an ARM ( breaking the waters) as she was 3 cms dilated
This was carried out in the admission room and the woman was transferred to Labour Ward
On admission to labour ward there was a prolapsed cord and the fetal heart was absent
Both twins were born vaginally 2 hours later, twin 1 was a fresh stillbirth and twin 2 was a macerated stillbirth
Identifying responses The most important part of the MPDSR review process is to ensure that realistic and effective responses are identified after every death. In the next activities, work in the same groups as you did for the RRT role play.
Practical 10: SMART responses
Q1. List 3 Avoidable factors
1……………………………………………………………………………………………………..
2……………………………………………………………………………………………………..
3…………………………………………………………………………………………………….
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Q2. List the 3 actions you consider to be most appropriate
1……………………………………………………………………………………………………..
2……………………………………………………………………………………………………..
3……………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Q3. Are your actions SaART?
Action 1 Action 2 Action 3 Specific
aeasurable
Achievable
Realistic
Timely
Answers:
Q1. List 3 Avoidable factors
1… Delayed referral after the 28 week review. in this review the problem of large for dates was noted, but no action was taken and the next review was a routine one at 36 weeks. An earlier review eg. at 30 weeks should have been planned to decide if an early referral was indicated. Earlier referral may have prevented the death of twin 2.
2… Substandard medical care. Inappropriate decision about the mode of delivery. The ARM resulted in a prolapsed cord,causing the death of twin 1. The Resident had performed an USS. It should have been possible to assess the risk of prolapsed cord by a combination of clinical examination and USS eg. Assessment of amount of liquor and position of the fetus.. It is likely that polyhydramnios was present +/_ the position of the fetus was suboptimal for vaginal delivery.
3… Substandard medical care. Inappropriate venue of ARM. It was inappropriate to perform an ARM in the admission room where access to C/S would be delayed. If an ARM is performed in this situation, it should be a controlled ARM with Anaesthetic and OR staff immediately available.
Q2. List the 3 actions you consider to be most appropriate
1. Organise an education meeting about the quality of ANC for all providers of ANC within 2 weeks. Include the need to identify and refer women with suspected large for dates pregnancies to identify multiple pregnancies and organise appropriate ANC follow up and hospital delivery. Attendance at the meeting should be recorded.
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2. Organise an education meeting about multiple pregnancy for all medical, midwifery and anaesthetic staff to increase awareness of the complications of multiple pregnancy and the associated increase in maternal and perinatal mortality and morbidity. The meeting should take place within 2 weeks. Attendance at the meeting should be recorded.
3. Devise guidelines for management of Multiple pregnancy at the facility and start an annual audit of Multiple pregnancies to be conducted by a named Resident. Draft guidelines should be developed by a senior resident and reviewed by the Lead Obstetrician, lead midwife and medical director. The guidelines should include guidance about ANC management, intrapartum and postpartum management of multiple pregnancy . The audit should audit actual management of all cases of multiple pregnancies against the standards set in the guidelines . The guidelines should be completed and signed off at the facility by the Medical Director within 4 weeks and the audit initiated in the following week.
Q3. Are your actions SMART?
Action 1 Action 2 Action 3 Specific
Yes, the participants are specifically mentioned and specific items to include in the meeting are mentioned.
Yes, the participants and the content of the meeting are specified.
Yes, the content of the guidelines is detailed and a specific individual given responsibility for this task.
Measurable
Yes, a register of attendance confirms not only that the meeting took place, but also what % of relevant staff attended
Yes, a register of attendance confirms not only that the meeting took place,but also what % of relevant staff attended
Yes, the availability of the guidelines and completion of the first audit are both measurable outcomes
Achievable
Yes, all facilities should hold regular education meetings to improve standards of care.
Yes, all facilities should hold regular education meetings to improve standards of care.
This will depend on the capacity of the facility to generate guidelines and adequately distribute them to staff.
Realistic
Yes, all facilities should have the capacity to hold such a meeting
Yes, all facilities should have the capacity to hold such a meeting
As above, also dependent on internet access as there are good examples of international guidelines for multiple pregnancy available at RCOG and WHO which can be adapted for local use.
Timely
Within 2 weeks Within 2 weeks The guidelines should be complete within 4 weeks and the audit within a year thereafter.
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Action plan template
Date of meeting ___________Case ID _______________ Maternal Death Maternal Near miss
Date of Death (date of discharge, if near miss): ____________ Death preventable
Avoidable Factor Action to be taken as a result of the case terson responsible for the action
Timeline Date Action completed
Remark
Yes No
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Module 8 MPDSR Role and Responsibility
Slide 1 atDSR RhLE AND RESthNSIBILITYCommunity Level
Health extension • Identify and notify
probable maternal and perinatal death
• Reports from the community to the respective health center surveillance focal person within 24 hours.
• Completely fill verbal autopsies within 02-week after notification
• HEWs Summarize a total deaths and report to the respective health center on a weekly basis.
Slide 2 atDSR RhLE AND RESthNSIBILITYHealth Facility level
Surveillance focal person at HC• Immediately notify (within 30
minutes) the PHEM focal person of the respective Woreda
• Formally Complete the identification and notification format within 24 hours.
• Fill the verbal autopsy of all deaths within one week of notification.
• Receive WRF-HEWs every week that is reported from HEWs and report to the next level.
• Complete FBMDA for every death notified from the facility within 1 week of initial notification.
• The facility RRT will review FBMDA/FBPDA and VA within 1week, and complete the MDRF/PDRF and develop a response action plan
• MDRFs/PDRFs will be sent by the surveillance focal person within 48 hours to the immediate higher level PHEM unit.
Slide 3 atDSR RhLE AND RESthNSIBILITYWoreda Health hffice level
PHEM officer at Woreda• Works closely with the MNCH
officer for MPDSR/PHEM. • Works with RRT/ERT led by the
Woreda administrator for multi-sectorial response management of MPDSR/PHEM
• Receives WRF from health centers on a weekly basis and sends to the zonal/regional PHEM unit
• Receives MDRFs and PDRFs from all health centers within one month following receipt of WRFs and send to the next level.
• Checks the MDRFs and PDRFs for completeness and send to the zonal/regional PHEM unit.
• Compile and analyze WRF and MDRF/PDRF data, and produce a report.
• Works with the MNCH unit and Woreda administrator to organize a dissemination meeting for multi-stakeholders of the RRT/ERT to plan and implement responses included in the action plan.
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Slide 4 atDSR RhLE AND RESthNSIBILITYZonal Health hffice level (where applicable)
PHEM officer (zonal)• works closely with the
PHEM and MNCH officers of the RHB and Woredahealth offices for MPDSR/PHEM.
• Receives WRF from Woreda health offices and hospitals on a weekly basis
• Receives MDRFs/PDRFs from all Woreda health offices and hospitals within one month of receiving WRFs of deaths.
• Checks for completeness of the MDRFs/PDRFs and send the the next level.
Slide 5 atDSR RhLE AND RESthNSIBILITYRegional Health Bureau level
RHB PHEM unit
• works closely with the MNCH unit of the region for MDSR/PHEM.
• Leads the Regional MPDSR/PHEM TWG in close collaboration with the MNCH unit. For response management, the regional multi-sectorial MPDSR/PHEM response.
• Receives WRF from Woreda health offices/zonal health offices and hospitals on a weekly basis and to the National PHEM unit.
• Receives MDRFs/PDRFs from all Woreda health offices/zonal health offices and hospitals within one month of receipt of WFRs of deaths.
• Checks MDRF/PDRF completeness and sends the MDRF/PDRF copies to the national PHEM unit, keeping one copy in the regional PHEM unit.
• Compile and analyze WRF and MDRF/PDRF data, and produce a report.
• Collaborates with the MNCH unit and regional administrator to organize a dissemination meeting for regional PHEM multi-sectorial stakeholders and to plan and implement responses identified in the action plans of the MPDSR TWG.
• Develops a report on monthly, quarterly, semiannual and annual plans of the regional MNCH and other units of RHB.
Slide 6 atDSR RhLE AND RESthNSIBILITYCentral/National level
PHEM unit within EPHI• works closely with the MNCH unit
of the FMOH of Ethiopia on MPDSR/PHEM.
• Leads the MPDSR/PHEM TWG in collaboration with the MNCH unit for response management at the national level.
• Receives WRFs from regional PHEM units on a weekly basis.
• Receives MDRFs from all regional PHEM units within one month of WRF reports of the deaths.
• The national PHEM unit checks MDRF completeness.
• Compile and analyze the WRF and MDRF data and produce a report and development of an action plan by MPDSR TWG.
• Collaborates with the MNCH unit and FMOH higher officials to organize a dissemination meeting for national PHEM multi-sectorial stakeholders to plan and implement responses included in MPDSR/TWG action plans.
• Develops a monthly, quarterly, semiannual and annual plans of the national MNCH unit and other units of FMOH.
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Module 9: MPDSR Monitoring and Evaluation Slide 1 atDSR ahNIThRING AND EVALUATIhN
• The purpose of M&E evaluation framework is to monitor progress of the MPDSR system.
• The framework also assesses the relevance, effectiveness and impact of activities in the light of the objectives the surveillance and response system.
• Specific indicators are identified based on the WHO surveillance M&E guidance .
• These are illustrated as components of the M&E framework in the MPDSR technical guide.
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Slide 2 Components of a&E of the atDSR System
•Completeness•Timeliness of reporting
•Standards and guidelines •Training
•Supervision•Communication facilities
•Resource
•Case detection •Case registration
•Case confirmation•Reporting
•Data analysis and interpretation
•Epidemic preparedness•Response and control
•Feedback
•Mandatory notification• Surveillance strategy
•Networking and partnership, coordination
Structure hf The System
Core Functions
Surveillance Quality
Support Functions
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Slide 3 Components of the System:Structure of the System:
• The structure of MPDSR system is defined by mandatory notification of maternal and perinatal deaths, the surveillance strategy for MPDSR, and networking and partnership as the elements for progress measurement using specific indicators listed under each element.
Core Functions of the System:
• The core functions measure the process and outputs of the system. It includes elements such as death detection, death registration, death confirmation, reporting, data analysis and interpretation, epidemic preparedness, response and control, and feedback.
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Slide 4 Components of the SystemSupport Functions of the System:
• Support functions of the system facilitate implementation of the core functions and include standards and guidelines, training, supervision, communication, and resources as its elements.
Quality of the System:
• The quality of the MPDSR system is defined by attributes such as completeness and timeliness of reporting of the system.
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Slide 5 a&E Approach and aethod:
• The system implements robust supervision, review meetings, and regular reporting and assessment of performance as standard M&E approaches. In addition to data obtained through the routine surveillance/MPDSR reports, the system will use such techniques as key informant interviews and review of documents to gather information.
• This M&E framework uses a matrix of core and optional indicators categorized by level of their importance. These indicators are also categorized by type, e.g. input, process, output, outcome and impact. The matrix also provides definitions for the indicators, frequency of data collection, data sources and collection methods. Targets have been set for a set of core indicators to monitor key achievements over time.
(Refer the MPDSR Technical Guidance)
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